Picturing Displacement: UNRRA and the Visual Language of Humanitarianism – Silvia Salvatici
Established in November 1943 by 44 Allied nations, the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) presented itself as the humanitarian arm of the Allied war effort. Tasked with assisting civilians in liberated countries, it distributed food, provided medical care, traced missing relatives, and managed refugee camps. More broadly, UNRRA sought to promote a new vision of humanitarian action, combining international cooperation with modern relief practices. Photography played a crucial role in communicating this mission. Rather than focusing on suffering and distress alone, UNRRA’s images highlighted recovery and renewal. Men, women, and children displaced by war were often portrayed as active participants in a process of rehabilitation, reflecting the organization’s belief that relief should lead to both physical and moral reconstruction.


