The Department of French and The
Alliance Française of Washington Present
Engaging
in Humanitarianism
in the
Real and Virtual Worlds
A Lecture in English by

Alain
Dubos,
Former Vice-President of Doctors Without
Borders
(1999 Nobel Peace Prize)
Tuesday, April 10, 3:15 p.m.
Espace McCarthy, ICC-425
How should we view emergency medical engagement in
the early part of our
new century?
More than 30 years after it was established, Doctors Without Borders continues its work
in over 40 countries on five continents. From the secrecy of former times to
the worldwide aura bestowed upon it by the Nobel Peace Prize in 1999, the
organization has always had to adapt its original philosophy, “to go where
others don’t go,” to the constraints of a world in upheaval after the fall of
the Berlin Wall.
Vice-President of Doctors Without Borders for a half-dozen years, Alain Dubos has completed numerous
missions, often clandestine, in many countries at war, from Afghanistan to
Lebanon and Kurdistan, to name a few. From these experiences, Dubos has
produced a series of novels and non-fiction works and has since continued to
work for population groups in danger. Thirty years after his early pioneering
travels, his most recent mission was to Cambodia in March 2006.
PLEASE NOTE:
The lecture will take place in the Espace McCarthy, the conference room located in the French Department (and NOT in the Gervase Conference Room as previously publicized).