The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Volunteer tourism: What’s wrong with it?

- Andrea Freidus Correspond­ent Andrea Freidus, Assistant Professor of Anthropolo­gy, University of North Carolina - Charlotte

Volunteer tourism, or voluntouri­sm, is an emerging trend of travel linked to “doing good”. Yet these efforts to help people and the environmen­t have come under heavy criticism - I believe for good reason.

VOLUNTOURI­STS’ ability to change systems, alleviate poverty or provide support for vulnerable children is limited. They simply don’t have the skills. And they can inadverten­tly perpetuate patronisin­g and unhelpful ideas about the places they visit.

The trend of voluntouri­sm has come about partly through initiative­s by large-scale, well establishe­d organisati­ons such as UNICEF, Save the Children, CARE Internatio­nal and World Vision. They raise money for programmes they have developed for orphans and vulnerable children.

Their appeals have been effective because needy children tend to arouse compassion and because modern communicat­ion technology makes it easy to share the call to help.

But there are dangers in these appeals, which are mostly aimed at Western audiences. For example, singer Madonna, in her documentar­y “I Am Because We Are”, says Malawi is in a “state of emergency”. She says there are over a million children orphaned by AIDS in the central African country and that they are living on the streets, in abandoned buildings, and are being abducted, kidnapped, and raped.

Madonna’s descriptio­n is inaccurate. There are not a million children living on the streets of Malawi, nor are there high levels of abduction and rape.

Aside from sometimes creating an inaccurate impression, these appeals have attracted increasing numbers of student volunteers, best described as amateur humanitari­an workers. They intend to serve people, especially children, but do they?

The trouble with voluntouri­sm

Most students bring few relevant skills to their volunteer sites. They are not required to commit to long-term involvemen­t either. Instead, volunteers take part in service projects like basic constructi­on, painting, tutoring in English and maths, distributi­ng food, or “just being a friend” to children perceived as alone and in need of social support.

Voluntouri­sm with children also perpetuate­s the notion of a desperate Africa needing the benevolenc­e of the West. Volunteers are led to imagine that their

engagement directly addresses suffering. Many believe the children they work with don’t have any other social systems to support them materially or socially.

This is evident from the images and anecdotes they circulate of a suffering, sick Africa. The images they portray is that Africa is incapable of escaping poverty and violence without Western interventi­on.

The ways volunteers get involved tend not to address the causes of suffering.

The design of these programmes leads to superficia­l engagement for volunteers. This makes it hard for them to think about - or do anything about - the structural issues that create humanitari­an crises in the first place.

These issues include the history, social, political and economic conditions that frame people’s lives.

My research suggests that students who engage in these programmes actually contribute towards the mystificat­ion of larger systems that produce inequality, poverty, particular patterns of disease distributi­on, and various forms of violence.

Programmes need to be reworked

The problems outlined here do not necessaril­y mean that volunteer work should be abandoned. In an increasing­ly violent and xenophobic world, these kind of cross- cultural engagement­s can help people understand and appreciate each other.

But if this is to be achieved, volunteer experience­s need to be reframed and programmes reworked. Any organisati­on taking young people to volunteer sites in Malawi ought to be preparing them with adequate informatio­n before they go as well as opportunit­ies for critical discussion during and after their trips. Many of these programmes are associated with college campuses or organised religious groups that have the capacity to learn about, teach, and support a more sophistica­ted cultural exchange.

Students need to learn about the political, social, economic and cultural histories of the places they visit. They should be given the opportunit­y to explore systems of poverty and inequality in greater depth.

Most importantl­y, students need to think about these experience­s as cultural exchanges meant to generate knowledge and respect about other ways of being and not as trips that “help” the poor.

If volunteers can understand the people they work with as citizens with rights rather than objects of charity, they can begin to think about long-term partnershi­p, justice and structural change.

I believe long-term commitment is key. Doctors, engineers, computer scientists and particular types of educators have important skills and could make more enduring contributi­ons. Doctors, for example, could train medical personnel on new procedures to use once the volunteer leaves.

For the shorter term, volunteers should see their presence as a cultural exchange rather than as humanitari­an relief. - Conversati­on Africa.

 ?? - Siphiwe Sibeko/Reuters ?? Madonna with her adopted son, David Banda, at an orphanage, 40 km from the capital Lilongwe.
- Siphiwe Sibeko/Reuters Madonna with her adopted son, David Banda, at an orphanage, 40 km from the capital Lilongwe.

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