Introduction
Since February 2022, the Russian invasion of Ukraine has resulted in a massive humanitarian and displacement crisis.Footnote 1 There are currently over 5 million internally displaced Ukrainians and over 6 million refugees recorded globally, the vast majority of whom remain in Europe.Footnote 2 So far, Ukrainian refugees have been welcomed with more or less open arms across Europe, in stark contrast to the experience of other refugees.Footnote 3 From the outset, the response to the humanitarian emergency in Ukraine has been a complex web of private and public initiatives. As people fled across borders to Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania, networks of volunteers descended to offer shelter, food, medical supplies, clothing, transport, and other necessities. As humanitarian emergency responses go, this was one initially driven as much by ‘ordinary people’ as by international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) and United Nations (UN) agencies, reflecting a practice variously described by scholars as ‘private humanitarianism’, ‘grassroots humanitarianism’, ‘everyday humanitarianism’, or ‘citizen aid’.Footnote 4
In the United Kingdom, the government launched its ‘Homes for Ukraine’ (HfU) scheme in March 2022 – an extraordinary, institutionalised expansion of the role that private individuals play in responding to a humanitarian emergency. The scheme encourages ‘ordinary’ people (as well as charities, churches, communities, and businesses) to host Ukrainian refugees, the vast majority of whom are women and children. As of November 2023, more than 137,000 Ukrainians had arrived in the UK through the Ukraine Sponsorship Scheme (as it is formally known), and over 240,000 people had expressed interest in sponsoring Ukrainian refugees under the scheme as of May 2023.Footnote 5 While temporary refugee host or ‘homestay’ initiatives exist in other countries, these have been organised mainly on a relatively small-scale basis via community networks and charities.Footnote 6 By contrast, the UK’s HfU hosting scheme is unique in its scale and structure: it represents the official response of the UK government to displacement from Ukraine, is implemented on a national scale and characterised by an especially significant degree of government involvement and formalisation, and is the only visa route for Ukrainians that involves housing.Footnote 7
This paper is based on an analysis of policy materials, official statements, promotional materials, and media reports focused on the HfU scheme, as well as engagement with existing research. We conceptualise private refugee hosting as a form of humanitarian practice. This conceptualisation contributes to existing work on ‘everyday humanitarianism’Footnote 8 or ‘citizen aid’,Footnote 9 a trend that describes private individuals participating substantially in actions which can be defined as ‘humanitarian’ without being or becoming professional humanitarians. However, in this case the beneficiary is not geographically distant, but lodging in people’s homes.
Our analysis and arguments are informed by a range of literatures, including scholarship on the politics and trajectories of humanitarianism, ‘private’ or ‘everyday’ humanitarianism, private refugee hosting, and the politics of the ‘home’. The significance and need for critical consideration of the HfU initiative is highlighted in recent papers on the scheme, which examine shifting responsibilities for and lived experiences of accommodating and supporting refugeesFootnote 10 and gendered and racialised logics and conditions of hospitalityFootnote 11 and draw on some similar bodies of literature. We contribute to this emerging body of scholarship by specifically framing the HfU – and private refugee hosting more broadly – as a form of humanitarianism, extending existing research that has largely addressed private refugee hosting and hospitality, and private or ‘everyday’ humanitarianism separately. By bringing them together we are not only explicitly decentring what counts as humanitarianism, but also centring private homes as a key site for humanitarian practice.
We approach HfU with a sense of ambivalence. On the one hand, the scheme captures the extraordinary generosity of individuals and communities towards people in need amid a cost-of-living crisis, following austerity, post-pandemic precarity, and in a political landscape rife with hostility and racism towards refugees.Footnote 12 On the other hand, the scheme signals a worrying outsourcing of humanitarian responses to private individuals, which brings its own risks. While there was a great deal of enthusiasm for the scheme initially, local and national governments now struggle to retain hosts, and the fluctuation of media attention leaves the scheme vulnerable to depletion, in turn putting refugees at risk of becoming reliant on transitory emotional attachments and hosts’ changing life circumstances.Footnote 13 A very real risk for Ukrainians exiting the scheme for any reason is homelessness. In March 2024, over 9,400 Ukrainian refugee households had been reported as homeless in the UK, although figures are likely higher as it is not mandatory for local councils to report.Footnote 14 Finally, it is impossible to discuss this scheme outside the political environment of growing hostility towards other refugees and asylum seekers arriving in the UK.Footnote 15 The privileging of a certain kind of gendered and racialised ‘guest’ (a woman and/or a child, overwhelmingly white, European) over other groups speaks to the inherent racism and sexism of the humanitarian refugee system and how it is practised in the UK.Footnote 16
We make our argument in three parts. Inspired by those who seek to rethink the spatial dimensions of humanitarian practice,Footnote 17 we argue that HfU shifts the geographical borders of the humanitarian space into the private setting of people’s homes, complicating what and who is recognised as humanitarian. While the role of private individuals, churches, communities, and businesses is not new in humanitarianism,Footnote 18 private refugee hospitality as a central pillar of government response to an influx of refugees is. HfU and private refugee hosting therefore challenge which spaces are intelligible as humanitarian spaces, commonly thought of as public (e.g. refugee or internal displacement camps, food distribution centres, water and sanitation facilities) but in this context shifted to the intimate space of the home.
Second, we suggest that HfU represents a unique case of refugee hospitality and private humanitarian action, reliant on inherent notions of the ‘home’ as a safe space. HfU incorporates the home as a site of patriotic and humanitarian practice, and a place of sanctuary, refuge, support, and intimacy – capturing the blurring of the personal and the international in specific gendered and racialised ways.Footnote 19 Finally, we show how HfU’s bordering practices cannot be understood outside of often hypocritical, violent, gendered, and racialised humanitarian and refugee regimes. Hospitality is never a simple offering of goods, services, or space; rather, it entails ‘the right and power of the host over the guest, thereby implying a form of dominance’.Footnote 20 This tension is embedded in HfU – a scheme of inclusion and exclusion, generosity and violence, solidarity and conflict.Footnote 21
Before proceeding, a brief note on terminology. Despite the fact that Ukrainians do not legally hold the status of ‘asylum seeker’ or ‘refugee’ in the UK (they receive specific visas granting them the right to stay for three years, work, study, access public services, and claim benefits),Footnote 22 we use the term ‘refugee’ and ‘refugees’ to describe those hosted under the HfU scheme as well as other refugees. We do this for two reasons. First, it simplifies a complicated set of legal and political categories such as ‘visa holder’, ‘asylum seeker’, ‘refugee’, or ‘migrant’. While these are hugely significant for people and hold materially real consequences, they are not the main focus of this paper. Secondly, we have chosen to include Ukrainians discursively alongside others who have ‘fled war, persecution or national disasters’Footnote 23 also to make a political point. While the UK government has chosen to treat refugees from, for example, Syria, Sudan, Afghanistan, and Iraq fundamentally differently from those from Ukraine, often pointing to how they arrived in the country (via ‘legal’ or ‘regular’ versus ‘illegal’ or ‘irregular’ routes), we want to highlight their similarities. This emphasises how differential forms of humanitarian hospitality are determined less by ‘need’ or ‘right’ and more by political choices. Finally, we understand humanitarianism as ‘an array of embodied, situated practices emanating from the humanitarian desire to alleviate the suffering of others’, rather than in a narrow institutional sense.Footnote 24
Homes for Ukraine: ‘Britain at its best’Footnote 25
The international response to Ukraine’s humanitarian crisis reflects several emerging or intensifying trends in humanitarian response, including challenges to principles of neutrality and impartiality, as well as responses to the ‘middle-class’ needs of many displaced Ukrainians in contrast to standard ‘minimum humanitarian packages’.Footnote 26 The widespread private and informal networks of volunteer groups, community groups, and individuals – providing food, transport, housing, and more to those displaced – is another such trend visible in the international responses to the Ukrainian crisis.Footnote 27 This ‘wave of grassroots humanitarianism’,Footnote 28 characterised by the expanding role of non-traditional aid providers, challenges ‘narrow assumptions of what makes a humanitarian’.Footnote 29
Since the beginning of the war, the UK has provided £347 million in humanitarian assistance, the vast majority via UN and Red Cross agencies,Footnote 30 plus an additional £127 million allocated in June 2023,Footnote 31 with a focus on the most vulnerable, including ‘women and children’.Footnote 32 These are significant sums, and, while one should be cautious with historical comparisons, this is more than the UK spent over two decades in Afghanistan.Footnote 33 This differentiated response is echoed domestically in the UK, notably through HfU. HfU encourages members of the public to host Ukrainian refugees in their homes for a minimum of six months. In return, the UK government provides a payment of £350 a month for the first 12 months, increasing to £500 a month for a total of two years.Footnote 34 Some councils provide ‘top up’ payments to retain hosts, and while community groups and organisations can host as well, the scheme requires a named person as the sponsor.Footnote 35 In launching HfU, government representatives appealed directly to public compassion, a sense of civic responsibility, and a patriotic duty. HfU would function, according to Local Government Association chairman James Jamieson, ‘to support communities who wish to offer assistance to those fleeing the devastating conflict’Footnote 36 and has been described as ‘one of the fastest, biggest and most generous visa programmes in British history’.Footnote 37 At its launch, parallels were drawn to historical instances of private humanitarian responses in the UK, notably the ‘Kinder Transport’ response during the Second World War, hailed as an ‘act of culture-defining hospitality’.Footnote 38
The patriotic sentiments expressed at the launch of the scheme and the frequent calls to care and compassion bring into sharp relief just how differently Ukrainian refugees are treated compared to others arriving in the UK.Footnote 39 In particular, the scale of HfU can be contrasted with the UK’s resettlement of Syrian refugeesFootnote 40 and the widespread failure of resettlement initiatives for Afghan refugees after the withdrawal of Western forces from Afghanistan in 2021.Footnote 41 As noted by one refugee support charity, ‘Ukrainians … lived in people’s homes but Afghans were left in hotels for months’.Footnote 42 On the whole, the welcome offered to Ukrainians – racialised as white – contrasts sharply to the heavy-handed responses by European states in general to refugees from the ‘Global South’ (e.g. Syria, Afghanistan, Sudan), who are met with increasingly limited options for asylum, militarised border guards, detention centres, routine pushbacks, and forcible returns, reflecting ‘a two-tiered system of robust protections for Europeans and closed-door policies for non-European refugees’.Footnote 43
The matching of hosts and guests in the HfU scheme can happen in numerous ways, some more formalised than others. Immediately after the scheme was launched, charities warned that it could operate as ‘Tinder for sex traffickers’, and the UNHCR requested the UK stop women and children being matched with single men.Footnote 44 The scheme is primarily managed by local councils responsible for criminal checks through the Disclosure and Barring Service, accommodation checks, and supporting Ukrainians when hosting arrangements fall through, end, or they choose to leave. Pressures on local councils are therefore significant. As James Jamieson stated less than a year after the scheme was launched, ‘We are deeply concerned at the growing number of Ukrainians presenting as homeless … and in particular the significant rise in the number of those who arrived through the [HfU] scheme’.Footnote 45 Worries persist after funding to local governments for each Ukrainian refugee hosted was nearly halved, from £10,500 per person to £5,900 in January 2023.Footnote 46
Despite these challenges, it has been suggested that HfU ‘should be a blueprint for the future’.Footnote 47 Reports by the refugee charity Sanctuary Foundation describe HfU as the UK’s ‘most successful refugee initiative’, representing ‘an innovative and highly effective shift in approach’ to providing sanctuary and ‘a model for the future’.Footnote 48 Other charities also point to the scheme as informing future crisis-response initiatives.Footnote 49 According to one prominent academic, HfU ‘is a chance to think about the UK contributing to best practice globally’,Footnote 50 while another report suggests that the success of the scheme ‘provides the foundations of a model that can be considered for the future’.Footnote 51 Charities have also presented HfU as reflecting ‘longstanding government policy to provide sanctuary and asylum to those in need’,Footnote 52 suggesting that ‘providing sanctuary for refugees at home has put to bed once and for all the notion that post-Brexit Britain is in danger of retreating to become a little England’.Footnote 53 While we do not dispute the positive outcomes of this scheme, nor the potentials for expansion, we argue that it needs to be understood within a wider landscape and history of humanitarian response and situated in relation to the UK’s increasingly restrictive and violent wider response to refugees.
Private refugee hosting as humanitarian practice
Humanitarian activities – and the humanitarian field more broadly – have long been shaped by a distinction between ‘private’ and ‘public’ spheres and roles, responsibilities, and forms of action.Footnote 54 In the Global North, humanitarian action has tended to be understood as something explicitly public, led by large international NGOs and funded by states. However, the history of humanitarian action, and the development of an international humanitarian system, is one of complex and overlapping relationships between public and private action, where the ‘traditional’ model of the Global North is by no means the only one.Footnote 55 Humanitarianism has ‘always been a spatially extensive and ambivalent discourse and practice, exerted through different agencies and expressed in different registers’,Footnote 56 and HfU reflects a continuation of this reality.
In recent years, scholars have paid increasing attention to what is variously called ‘grassroots humanitarianism’,Footnote 57 ‘volunteer humanitarianism’,Footnote 58 ‘everyday humanitarianism’,Footnote 59 ‘citizen aid’,Footnote 60 or ‘alternative humanitarianism’.Footnote 61 This trend describes private individuals participating substantially in actions which can be defined as ‘humanitarian’ without being or becoming professional humanitarians, outside the boundaries and structures of formal, professional humanitarian activity.Footnote 62 This usually involves informal, small-scale, privately funded forms of aid, often provided outside the framework of international aid agencies, NGOs, or governments, by ‘ordinary people making ethical decisions about providing assistance to others’Footnote 63 – that is, ‘the everyday humanitarian actions of ordinary citizens’ responding to suffering in times of crisis.Footnote 64 This includes, for example, private individuals, grassroots organisations, and volunteer networks providing food, clothing, shelter materials, first aid, and language and legal support to refugees in places of first arrival, in countries of passage, and in places of destination, including in camps and settlements, often due to a lack of wider humanitarian and government supports.Footnote 65
This ‘everyday humanitarianism’ has also extended into people’s homes and coincided with the emergence of private refugee-hosting initiatives, where ‘ordinary citizens’ (private individuals or households) host refugees in their homes.Footnote 66 This practice is alternately termed ‘volunteer refugee hosting’,Footnote 67 ‘family hosting’,Footnote 68 ‘domestic hospitality’,Footnote 69 ‘private hospitality’,Footnote 70 ‘intimate solidarity’,Footnote 71 ‘home accommodation’,Footnote 72 or ‘homestay accommodation’.Footnote 73 In Europe, this practice grew in response to the so-called refugee crisis from 2015 onwards, increasing sharply following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, initiated by grassroots volunteer networks, private organisations (e.g. churches, charities), or government authorities.Footnote 74 In the UK, charities such Refugees at Home, founded in 2016, and Reset UK, founded in 2018, have been established to offer alternative accommodation for refugees and to enable individuals and communities to house refugees in a more streamlined manner – including under HfU.Footnote 75
While on the increase, these private and volunteer forms of refugee support are not new.Footnote 76 Nor is this everyday humanitarianism by any stretch primarily European or British – quite the contrary. Forms of grassroots or volunteer responses to humanitarian and displacement crises within the Global South are characterised by long-standing forms of private support: ‘the invisible force of who is first on the scene … but who is never recognised for upholding humanitarianism’.Footnote 77 These include survivor- and community-led responses such as refugee-led humanitarian protection and assistance in Lebanon, Jordan, and Turkey, in Kenya and Uganda, and elsewhere,Footnote 78 and localised, citizen-led humanitarian responses to environmental, health, and displacement crises from Tanzania to Syria to Pakistan to Bangladesh.Footnote 79 In both the Global South and Global North, these private responses are often driven by geographic proximity to sites of humanitarian crisis and responseFootnote 80 as well as reflecting commitments to compassion, empathy, and solidarityFootnote 81 and political resistance to exclusionary, hostile, and punitive state policies regarding refugees, asylum seekers, and migrants.Footnote 82
However, such everyday humanitarianism might also be interpreted as an ‘outsourcing’ of humanitarian responsibility, away from the state and onto private individuals and households and wider civil society, echoing critiques of neoliberal shifts in the humanitarian field more broadly.Footnote 83 Private hosting in the UK, Canada, Australia, and elsewhere occurs in contexts of private refugee sponsorship, where associations, groups, or individuals fund and support refugee resettlement. While reflecting a practice of trans-border connection and collective action,Footnote 84 it also reflects a neoliberal outsourcing of states’ refugee resettlement commitments and positions private citizens as migration management actors and gatekeepers for resettlement,Footnote 85 representing a privatisation of states’ humanitarian programmes.Footnote 86 This parallels broader processes of neoliberal privatisation of accommodation for refugees and asylum seekers.Footnote 87
‘Modern’ humanitarianism is therefore a ‘product of a contradictory mixture of aims and ambitions: encompassing self-interest, social improvement, religious conviction, and scientific and philosophical discourses’, many of which do not sit easily with one another.Footnote 88 The uneasy and contradictory relationship between compassion and power, authority and ethics, and force and altruism is part and parcel of the history, conceptualisation, and practice of humanitarianism. As Polly Pallister-Wilkins argues, ‘while humanitarian action might succeed in saving the lives of those migrants exposed to border violence, it simultaneously (re)produces and structures violence’.Footnote 89 This tension persists in the practice (and politics) of HfU. In the following sections we unpack how refugee hosting as humanitarian response challenges existing notions of the public and the private, how the ‘home’ is constructed, and the gendered and racialised power dimensions underpinning the scheme.
Public duty, private spaces
HfU is funded by the UK’s Official Development Assistance under what is called ‘in-donor refugee costs’. This funding would normally go to overseas development and humanitarian aid but has in recent years been increasingly used within UK borders.Footnote 90 While this shift in the geography of funding is politically expedient for the government, it also carries some important conceptual reframings. The expansion of the ‘humanitarian space’, not only from the distant crisis-affected areas typically associated with humanitarian action,Footnote 91 but from the public settings of asylum centres or hotels housing refugees and into people’s private homes, signals a significant reconceptualisation of what humanitarianism is and where it takes place. Private refugee hosting challenges fundamental binaries of public and private, as a form of humanitarianism taking place ‘within the intimate setting of the household and everyday domestic practices’.Footnote 92 As such, it signifies a unique blurring of private and public dimensions, where private homes are offered up for a public duty. This is especially true with HfU, which is explicitly part of a state-defined and -led programme and reflects a more formalised private response mobilised by the state – an ‘institutionalised private hospitality’Footnote 93 or ‘institutionalized solidarity’Footnote 94 – rather than the informal ‘grassroots mobilisation’ described elsewhere.Footnote 95 In this scheme, hosts are performing a humanitarian public service in the intimate space of the home.
Conceptions of ‘public’ and ‘private’ are complex and vary across contexts and over time yet are characterised by assumed distinctions: ‘the open and revealed versus the hidden or withdrawn; and the collective versus the individual’.Footnote 96 These distinctions are blurred in the context of schemes such as HfU. The act of hosting takes place in an intimate, domestic space, but one which is fundamentally also public and international in its framing. The tensions and continuities between the domestic and the international, the private and the public, the hidden and the visible are not surprising to anyone concerned with the gendered dimensions of global politics. As Cynthia Enloe writes, ‘The personal is international. The international is personal’Footnote 97 – and private hosting as a form of humanitarian practice bears this out. These private actions occur in response to – and are articulated within – wider public forms of hospitality (that is, government responses to humanitarian crisis) and the wider ‘public worlds’ of migration systems and policies.Footnote 98 Indeed, private hosting itself ‘connects the private home to societal debates and mobilisations’ around migration and asylum, and welcome and belonging,Footnote 99 pointing to the deeply political (and public) nature of the ‘private’ home.Footnote 100 This is reiterated in official communication from the UK government stating that ‘without the generosity of all our hosts, we simply would not have been able to give shelter to so many of those in need’.Footnote 101
These connections are illustrated in multiple ways. Research on HfU point to intersecting motivations for hosting, including a desire to help Ukrainians fleeing Russia’s aggression, a response to the injustice and immorality of Russia’s invasion, and a sense of connection to people in Ukraine, with extensive media coverage of the Russian invasion playing an important role.Footnote 102 Private expressions of compassion and generosity through hosting are directly associated with collective national action and conceptions of national identity, described in political statements and local authority guidance materials as ‘living up to the values we all cherish and … a central part of a national effort driven by compassion’,Footnote 103 ‘[standing] together to support [Ukraine’s] displaced people’Footnote 104 and reflecting ‘the very best of our country’.Footnote 105 A report by the charity More in Common locates HfU within Britain’s ‘proud history of those fleeing conflict and persecution’, stating that the scheme ‘has shown Britain at its unarguable best’ and demonstrates that ‘supporting those in need is just what this country does’.Footnote 106 Reports by the Sanctuary Foundation situate HfU within ‘a longstanding British tradition of providing sanctuary and asylum to those in need’, rooted in a ‘generous impulse’ that is ‘a reflection of British values’.Footnote 107 At times, hosting is expressly associating with ‘doing their bit’ for a wider national cause, as a response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. For example, a statement by More in Common notes that the UK ‘has a proud history of leading the fight against tyrants … HfU sits firmly within that tradition’, with a later report describing hosts as doing ‘their small part to stand up to Putin’.Footnote 108
The politics of home and hospitality
As is evident, HfU incorporates the home as a site of patriotic and humanitarian practice, a place of sanctuary, refuge, and support. The various and contentious meanings of the home have long been studied within social science, especially within feminist scholarship. The home is, as Katherine Brickell writes, ‘one of the most idealized sites of human existence’.Footnote 109 Alison Blunt and Robyn Dowling refer to the home as a place or physical location where people live but also ‘an idea and an imaginary that is imbued with feelings’ – at once ‘a material dwelling and … an affective space’.Footnote 110 Or, as Deborah Chambers explains, home is both a location and ‘an emotional desire’.Footnote 111 While home is understood in a multiplicity of ways, cutting across these diverse understandings is a recognition of its connections to intimate relations and the domestic sphere, as well as how it generates borders and boundaries.Footnote 112 The concept of home becomes particularly complex in relation to displacement and migration, as it is imagined and reimagined, made and remade, left and returned to, and lived and felt in contexts of mobility.Footnote 113
The importance of the home being represented as a place of sanctuary and safety – ‘idealised as a haven’Footnote 114 – is crucial in the public representation of the HfU scheme. In promotional materials, policy statements, and guidance documents, the home is ‘cast as a uniform space of safety and familiarity’, a space of refuge, protection, security, and comfort.Footnote 115 Statements and materials on private hosting by charities such a Reset, Refugees at Home, and Sanctuary Foundation and by governments and local authorities consistently describe hosting arrangements in terms of safety and stability, refuge and sanctuary, comfort and welcome, and care, compassion, and warmth.Footnote 116 An illustrative statement from the Sanctuary Foundation reads, ‘The vast majority of hosts have been welcoming and continue to offer a safe haven to their matched refugee families.’Footnote 117
Statements from political figures, local authorities, and charities reflect both material and affective dimensions of the ‘home’. Secretary of State Michael Gove has offered ‘special thanks’ to ‘families across the UK who opened their homes and their hearts to Ukrainians fleeing war’.Footnote 118 According to the former Minister for Refugees, ‘the response of the British public has been incredible, opening their hearts and homes to the people of Ukraine’.Footnote 119 Refugees at Home likewise calls on ‘individuals and families … who are willing to open their hearts and their homes to people in need’.Footnote 120 This framing of ‘open homes and hearts’, while certainly a cliché, speaks to the way that hosting is simultaneously and explicitly constructed in both material and deeply emotional terms. As described by the Refugee Council’s chief executive, ‘Ukrainian families arriving here need a warm welcome, safe housing … emotional support, and connection’.Footnote 121
On offer here is something more than to simply to allow entry into the state or the home. As Nick Gill argues, ‘welcome’ ‘involves conveying to the newcomer the positive reception of their presence’ – it relies upon human warmth and ‘as such it cannot be mechanistic and unfeeling … Welcome demands intimacy.’Footnote 122 HfU statements and documents explicitly reflect these assumptions about affective responsibilities associated with hosting and hospitality – warmth of welcome, emotional support and understanding, kindness and friendship, and more. As stated in the Welsh Government’s guidance for hosts, ‘You are supporting a person or a family fleeing war who may be significantly distressed and vulnerable. We know … you will provide a warm welcome along with generosity, understanding and support.’Footnote 123 An email to HfU hosts from Michael Gove refers to ‘people who arrived as strangers, and are now hopefully becoming friends’ and notes, ‘We know that sponsors are motivated by philanthropy and kindness.’Footnote 124
In the most recent Office for National Statistics (ONS) survey of HfU hosts, 92 per cent reported that the accommodation provided to guests was their own home (as opposed to a separate housing entity owned by the host).Footnote 125 These arrangements therefore require ‘the sharing of space, time, and daily routines’ and daily exchanges through ‘the mundane experience of family life’.Footnote 126 This might encourage ‘intimate solidarity’, social closeness, and emotional connections, which involve complex negotiations of trust, care, and intimacy and of mutual expectations and needs between hosts and guests.Footnote 127 HfU is therefore ‘far more than a simple hosting arrangement’, with hosts ‘doing far more … than providing a safe place to stay’.Footnote 128 Studies of HfU hosting arrangements describe ‘a re-visioning of the meaning and practice of family and family life’ for hosts and guests.Footnote 129 This is linked to navigation of ‘house rules’ and routines and dynamics of communication and expressionFootnote 130 – that is, the ‘expectations and small practices of how individuals live together on a day-to-day basis’.Footnote 131
The flip side of this, as some HfU materials acknowledge and as emphasised in research on the scheme, is that offering hospitality in one’s home is never just an offering of space, services, or goods.Footnote 132 Hosts control the spaces, services, and goods offered to guests and determine processes and boundaries of inclusion and exclusion.Footnote 133 This ‘creates an asymmetric relationship between the host, who is at home, and the guest, who is given a precarious right to stay’.Footnote 134 Hospitality is a ‘deeply hierarchical and conditional’ form of inclusion characterised by power asymmetries between host and guest.Footnote 135 As Gillian McFadyen explains, drawing on Jacques Derrida, in ‘creating a home, you create a space with a border that is yours … The guest must cross over a border … in order to be included – hence the conditionality of the hospitality.’Footnote 136 Said differently, ‘hospitality is always inseparable from power because it is an ability, capacity, or strength to receive and give shelter to a stranger, foreigner, or other’.Footnote 137 This is further complicated by how expressions of compassion and welcome contribute to the reproduction of asymmetrical power relations and boundaries of inclusion and exclusion when linked to expectations of gratitude, reciprocity, or affection on the part of hostsFootnote 138 or when dynamics between hosts and guests (as providers and recipients of ‘charity’) challenge possibilities for relations of reciprocity.Footnote 139 Furthermore, they often hide the unequal distribution of compassion and its gendered and racialised underpinnings, to which we finally turn.
Gendered and racialised conditions of private hospitality
The public/private distinction – and in turn dominant conceptions of the home as part of the private or domestic rather than public space – is a profoundly gendered one, mapped onto categorisations of male and female, masculine and feminine.Footnote 140 In the Global North, the home has historically been defined in deeply gendered, racialised, and classed terms – in terms of a patriarchal, heterosexual, white, middle-class nuclear family, deeply rooted in constructions of nation and, in the UK, empire.Footnote 141 In turn, gendered and racialised logics are reflected in conceptions of care and hospitality as well as vulnerability and protection that underpin constructions of HfU arrangements, including through ‘labour of care’ regimes that surround hosting roles and portrayals and expectations of guests.
As Blunt and Dowling explain, gender and its intersections with race, ethnicity, class, sexuality, age, (dis)ability, and more, ‘is crucial in lived experiences and imaginaries of home’, including ‘relations of caring and domestic labour, affective relations of belonging, or establishing connections between the individual, household, and society’ as well as the relations of power and identities ‘constituted through home’.Footnote 142 These patterns are reproduced both in where welcome takes place (that is, the home) and in who does (or is assumed to do) the labour of ‘welcome’ within the humanitarian hospitality regime. This ‘labour of care’ that the governance of migration and refuge more broadly requires is largely feminised and racialisedFootnote 143 – and is reproduced within private hosting schemes such as HfU. In the context of hosting, this labour – ‘without which state-centred, institutional … ‘welcome’ would not be possible’Footnote 144 – includes preparing and maintaining the home, nourishment and meeting basic needs, emotional support and intimacy, and more.Footnote 145 While it is of course is not only women who labour in the domestic sphere, recent studies show that in the UK women still perform the majority of household and caring labour.Footnote 146 According to the most recent ONS survey, the small majority of HfU sponsors (55 per cent) are women.Footnote 147 However, it is not necessarily the named sponsor who does most of the practical and emotional labour when it comes to hosting work, and research on HfUFootnote 148 and elsewhereFootnote 149 points to the particular responsibilities managed by women.
Within private refugee hosting more broadly, hosts tend to be white, ‘native-born’ or national citizens, middle- or upper-class, and middle-aged (58 per cent of HfU hosts are aged 50 and older and 38 per cent are aged 30 to 49),Footnote 150 all factors that reflects the ease with which someone is financially and materially able to offer accommodation according to HfU guidelines (e.g. have a spare room or own a separate property). While the impetus to host or ‘the need to help’Footnote 151 does not seem to be primarily driven by financial gain,Footnote 152 financial security, class, and material resources certainly figure in people’s ability to host. Reliance on private resources and independent means can effectively exclude less advantaged households and individuals from engaging in this form of humanitarian helping and care. Thus, the realities of who hosts also reproduces particular racialised and classed conceptions and relations of hosting and humanitarian helping and care. In a recent study of 35 HfU hosting households, for example, all hosts identified as white.Footnote 153 This reflects broader private hosting dynamics in Europe where ‘the vulnerable victim … depends on the help of more powerful (middle-class and white) actors’,Footnote 154 reproducing the racialised and classed relations of the broader humanitarian field.Footnote 155
HfU, in its conceptualisation and operationalisation, has provided an avenue for demonstrating humanitarian compassion and care for those deemed as requiring – and being deserving of – protection and refuge, notably war-affected and displaced ‘womenandchildren’ or more specifically ‘refugeewomenandchildren’,Footnote 156 or ‘part of a displaced family, preferably female or child’.Footnote 157 Gender and age are central to representations of refugees, mobilising and reproducing assumptions about innocence, vulnerability, and protectability (and in turn intensifying insecurity for others, as discussed below).Footnote 158 This is reflected in how HfU is presented to (and by) hosts, to the wider public (including potential hosts) and to guests, centring women and their children as key constituents of the scheme under the logic that ‘we can’t say to the Ukrainian government that we’re standing with them if we’re not adequately caring for women and children who are here’.Footnote 159 As stated by the Refugee Council’s chief executive, ‘We are talking about very traumatised women and children.’Footnote 160 Media reporting on HfU across the board (from the Guardian to the Daily Mail) has centred images of women and children, and statements from hosts in media and other reports also reflect a focus on women and children and clear assumptions and preferences regarding guests’ gender, age, racialisation, and family status.Footnote 161 In line with traditional conceptions of who does what in war, ‘the notion of women and children being sent to safety whilst men stayed to fight’ has been one motivating factor identified by HfU hosts, and most would only consider hosting women and children.Footnote 162 Statements by politicians and charities in the UK have also repeatedly centred families – that is, nuclear, white, heteronormative families – fleeing Ukraine, as have local authorities.Footnote 163 For example, the welcome guide for guests prepared by the Gloucestershire County Council begins with, ‘we are pleased to … provide a safe place for you and your family … Our priority is to provide a safe and welcoming environment for you and your children’.Footnote 164
The privileging of the language of the home as a space of sanctuary and safety in private hosting arrangements, and assumptions about the home and hosting as necessarily rooted in kindness, generosity, and care negate the often-hidden violences of these spaces and relationships. As explained in feminist literature, the home is by no means universally experienced as safe, representing for many a place of insecurity, fear, alienation, exclusion, oppression, conflict, and violence.Footnote 165 The ‘idealised home’ masks the ways in which home can be ‘a threatened and threatening space’, characterised by precarity, vulnerability, insecurity, and instability.Footnote 166 As the vast majority of Ukrainian refugees are women with dependent children (though men are also hosted under HfU), this can add additional and different vulnerabilities and risks. In the context of humanitarian assistance and refugee support, conditions of vulnerability – structured by gender, race, ability, geography, and more – are produced and reinforced by and through humanitarian systems, practices, and interactions.Footnote 167
This reality is borne out in the HfU scheme. Since its launch, there have been numerous reports of and concerns raised about ‘predatory’ or ‘potentially abusive’ men, traffickers, and ‘unscrupulous landlords’ targeting Ukrainian women and children.Footnote 168 Given the differential power relations between ‘host’ and ‘guest’, and hosts’ ability to withdraw hospitality, the scheme relies on transient and fleeting emotional attachments, generating additional vulnerabilities for guests. The rise in the numbers of Ukrainian refugees who end up as homeless in the UK speaks to this.Footnote 169
As is clear, numerous bordering practices and contradictions underpin HfU, where care, compassion, generosity, inclusion, and solidarity exist alongside power, precarity, and exclusion. In addition to the dynamics discussed above, the clearest manifestation of the gendered and racialised dimensions of HfU are arguably the boundaries drawn between those who are included in the scheme and those who are not. In the UK, men (particularly single young men) are frequently vilified as ‘bogus asylum seekers’, where ‘gendered expectations regarding men’s agency and strength may actually increase their vulnerability’.Footnote 170 Quotes from some hosts explicitly demarcate gendered and racialised categorisations of ‘wanted’, ‘deserving’, and ‘protectable’ refugees: ‘I think people relate more to people because they’re in Europe … we do find it harder to relate to Syrian refugees or Afghan refugees … to see people who live similar lives to us being in that situation, I think that really affected people.’ ‘You’re more cautious about it if a family of five with a completely different world view descended on us.’ ‘In my mind, most refugees from Syria are young men … it’s mostly young men and so we wouldn’t have ever hosted a young man.’Footnote 171
These views reflect, and are sometimes also acknowledged as such, a wider societal discourse of ‘unwanted’ and ‘undeserving’ refugees, paralleled by hostile migration and asylum policies. In the UK, these bordering practices are particularly acute at a time when ‘Stop the Boats’Footnote 172 is a key government priority, where asylum seekers are held in detention centres and barges in conditions described as ‘inhumane’,Footnote 173 and the cartoon murals of well-known Disney characters in a reception centre are painted over as they were considered ‘too welcoming and sent the wrong message’.Footnote 174 Indeed, schemes such a HfU, emphasising and supporting ‘everyday’ humanitarian responsibility towards certain refugees, as valid as that responsibility is, also serve a strategic function, diverting attention away from increasingly repressive asylum, refugee, and migration regimes targeting those from the ‘Global South’. Conceptions of ‘home’ are also significant in relation to these forms of border and migration governance, as explored through the framework of ‘domopolitics’, which considers how the state is constructed as a (national) ‘home’ and in turn secured and protected through the management and regulation of borders and of migration and migrants.Footnote 175
Conclusion
Our analysis, bringing together discussions of private refugee hosting and everyday humanitarianism, centres the humanitarian logics and motivations underpinning hosting as a response to humanitarian crisis. Explicitly reading private refugee hosting as a form of ‘everyday humanitarianism’ enables us to decentre prevailing conceptualisations of what, who, and where counts as ‘humanitarian’, notably as being solely, or even primarily, the formalised system of Global North organisations intervening in the Global South. This decentring is crucial to considering how power and resources are decentralised to ‘local’ actors within the broader humanitarian sectorFootnote 176 and to examining ‘the local politics of giving’ alongside critical examination of ‘the concepts we use to build our theories explaining relationships of “helping”’.Footnote 177 This enables us to centre instead on the intimate and embodied space of the home as a key site of humanitarian practice and to unpack the gendered and racialised dimensions it holds and reproduces.
At the same time, our analysis shows how private refugee hosting as a form of humanitarianism does not exist outside of the prevailing colonial, racialised, and gendered hierarchies and dynamics that structure it as a whole.Footnote 178 As such, it is ‘a humanitarian intervention implicit in, rather than separate from, larger policies of racialised and gendered migration management’ and border regimes, involving ‘selective admission for some refugees whilst legitimizing the exclusion of others’.Footnote 179 Put differently, ‘mechanisms of bordering emerge within the home itself as an extension of the nation’.Footnote 180 Conceptions of home and hospitality here depend on boundaries of inclusion and exclusion – those who are welcomed versus those who are not. HfU creates clear boundaries where some are understood as protectable, vulnerable, and deserving of this form of private hospitality while others are very clearly defined as outside this humanitarian practice. This echoes the broader boundaries and dynamics of a ‘humanitarian politics of life’ that determines ‘whose lives are saved’ within a context of global crisesFootnote 181 or, put differently, a humanitarianism complicit in ‘producing and securing whiteness’.Footnote 182
While we echo many charities in praising HfU as a welcome break in what is an otherwise ‘hostile environment’ for refugees,Footnote 183 we nevertheless suggest that this scheme is a worrying ‘outsourcing’ of humanitarian responses – specifically, responsibility for housing and providing direct material and affective supports to refugees – to private individuals.Footnote 184 HfU signals a shift toward the formalisation of a reliance on private humanitarian hospitality in response to (certain) large-scale humanitarian crises and in turn an expansion of the humanitarian space into the domestic sphere – the private space of home becoming a space of public humanitarian response. Alongside the precarities and vulnerabilities that such schemes can generate for refugees and the challenges facing hosts and local authorities, this scheme more fundamentally represents a problematic intersection of gendered and racialised bordering processes at both domestic and state, or private and public, levels. Refugees deemed more vulnerable and protectable (that is, certain kinds of gendered and racialised ‘guests’) are welcomed but rendered reliant on transitory emotional attachments, on hosts’ changing life circumstances and on hierarchical, conditional, and precarious dynamics of hospitality – while others become subject to increasingly violent border regimes. Herein, ‘solidarity and goodwill shown by communities becomes the site from which the state governs and regulates who gets to stay and who gets to be cared for, and how’.Footnote 185
The significance of this is marked by the fact that HfU is already being widely suggested as a ‘blueprint’ or ‘model’ for the future of crises response initiatives, as discussed earlier – rooted in assumptions about the home as an idealised space of refuge, sanctuary, and safety. While in many cases private homes do represent refuge, sanctuary, and safety for those fleeing war, as in the case for many refugees from Ukraine, this is by no means a guarantee, and the fact that schemes modelled on HfU are reliant on selective conceptions of welcome, hospitality, and care on both private and public scales ought to be cause for concern. Similar critiques are also reiterated by charities, who argue that ‘the government is leaving the British public to pick up the pieces of a refugee protection system it has been tearing apart’, noting that ‘sponsorship is a wonderful way for people to show their support but they cannot be a country’s main response to large-scale displacement’.Footnote 186
We should emphasise that our critique of HfU and trends towards ‘private’ humanitarianism is not paralleled by an idealised view of state-led responses to humanitarian crises and refugee support. Indeed, UK government responses to housing and supporting asylum seekers and refugees have been characterised by conditions of precarity, vulnerability, and danger, as illustrated by a reliance on temporary, often overcrowded hotel accommodation (and subsequent evictions) for thousands of refugeesFootnote 187 and by ‘catastrophic’ protection failures affecting hundreds of asylum-seeking children in Home Office-funded hotels.Footnote 188 We do not suggest that the alternative to a reliance on private hosting is state-managed accommodation (e.g. in hotels) of the kind provided to refugees and asylum seekers to date, nor do we argue that being hosted in a private home is necessarily ‘better’ than indefinite stays in hotels. Rather, we suggest that these different practices and spaces of ‘hospitality’ engender, however differently, related dimensions of humanitarian responses to cross-border displacement underpinned by gendered, racialised, classed, and colonial categorisations as well as relations of power, conditionality, and precarity. And we propose that the positive and potentially radical opportunity of the HfU scheme lies in its ability to act as stepping stone for a humanitarian hospitality that mobilises forms of private and public care for, and solidarity with, all refugees. That would truly be ‘Britain at its best’.
Funding statement
No funding was associated with this project.
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.