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Examine options to ensure you help, rather than harm, while abroad
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The idea of combining service with international travel is taking its place as a viable mainstream choice in today's travel scene. Recent headlines herald volunteer vacations as one of the top travel options this year. As more and more travelers opt for this type of vacation, so too the range of opportunities expands. But not all volunteer vacations are created equal. Global Volunteers urges prospective international volunteers to carefully choose programs structured primarily for the benefit of the host community. When
the term volunteer vacations was coined by travel
guide author Bill McMillan in 1993, his book
Volunteer
Vacations:
Short-Term Adventures That Will Benefit You and
Others listed Global Volunteers and 79 other
nonprofit organizations. Today, more than 2,000
non-governmental organizations (NGOs) as well as
for-profit companies share the category of
volunteer vacations. But
not all of these offer genuine human and economic
development assistance to the people they claim to
serve. Most well-intentioned volunteers may not
realize that hastily contrived projects riding the
current voluntourism trend can in fact,
leave grossly unfavorable impressions in host
countries—and risk the wholesale reputation
(and tax deductibility) of American volunteer
efforts abroad. Mutually beneficial international volunteer opportunities are full-time programs, and prepare volunteers to serve ethically and sensitively in the host country. They're grounded in a long-term community development commitment, and contribute not just volunteer labor, but funds to support the volunteer work projects. Anything less potentially reinforces Ugly American stereotypes by simply dressing do-gooder programs in humanitarian clothes. Global Volunteers pioneered short-term international service programs in 1984 to engage American volunteers in meaningful projects abroad. Foremost is a focus on sustainable development—enabled through ongoing international partnerships, and knowledgeable volunteer preparation and management. Further, we share a common commitment with long-term development NGOs: To encourage and support local self-reliance. Global Volunteers' local host partners strive to engage volunteers fully in the day-to-day life of their communities, without exploiting local people for the volunteers' benefit. By working together, program participants working alongside local people can be fulfilled while addressing important community needs. Some part-time volunteer itineraries clearly fall short. Those that feature a day or two touring orphanages or a few hours a day working in a school can give the feeling of connecting with local people, but in fact, may be unbalanced in the volunteer's favor—costing local people more effort than the volunteer contribution merits. By contrast, true international partnerships focus on ongoing local investment, and engage team members in work projects that support local leaders' vision, commitment and contributions. Emergent voluntourism offerings—with their implied emphasis on tourism in place of service—threaten to weaken the very foundation that gave rise to these opportunities over two decades ago. We encourage prospective volunteers to select options which channel their efforts through work projects for one, two or three weeks not just a few hours. If uninformed, volunteers can find themselves part of something far different from what they expected. Article contributed by Michele Gran, Founder of Global Volunteers Global
Volunteers
Learn more about Global Volunteers' philosophy of
service and their development-based
service programs. Explore more Volunteer Abroad Opportunities » |
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