"This groundbreaking study provides a much-needed look at the local reception of foreign aid. Deeply attuned to the agency and aspirations of aid recipients, Doina Anca Cretu shows how Romanian men and women utilized American humanitarian and philanthropic assistance to advance their own nationalist visions and state-building projects, all at a pivotal period in European and global history."—Julia F. Irwin, Louisiana State University "Doina Anca Cretu's masterful book delivers an empathetic analysis of interwar actors who are often ignored in histories of humanitarianism. Cretu shifts the conventional power dynamics between 'east' and 'west,' aid givers and aid receivers, international organizations and incipient states."—James Koranyi, Durham University "This well-crafted and meticulously researched study of interwar US aid to Romania powerfully illustrates how languages of humanitarianism and technocratic developmentalism facilitated a relatively frictionless collaboration between liberal donors and illiberal local elites, supposedly 'above' politics or ideology."—Katherine Lebow, University of Oxford