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* [http://informationincontext.typepad.com/good_intentions_are_not_e/2010/02/voluntourism-what-could-go-wrong-when-trying-to-do-right.html Voluntourism: What could go wrong when trying to do right?] | * [http://informationincontext.typepad.com/good_intentions_are_not_e/2010/02/voluntourism-what-could-go-wrong-when-trying-to-do-right.html Voluntourism: What could go wrong when trying to do right?] | ||
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Revision as of 13:01, 28 February 2010
Potential problems with volunteering-as-tourism programs include:
- Creating one-off projects which have little long-term impact.
- Forgetting that volunteers are NOT free - they take time and resources to administer.
- Giving things away creates dependence; as with any form of subsidy, there is a danger of disempowering the people we intend to help.
- Monitoring projects poorly or not at all (see Monitoring and evaluation).
- Giving unskilled volunteers jobs that require skills. Young volunteers may be brimming with confidence, but may not have the skills needed.
- Forgetting to make the rest of the trip responsible, from checking who owns the hotels to buying carbon offsets.
- Fostering paternalism - the idea that "we privileged people from rich countries" can come in and fix things.
- Thinking that good intentions are enough. They are definitely not - see Good intentions, disastrous outcomes.