Autopsy of an International Alternative Break

IF 1.3 Q3 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Maya FarrHenderson, Amy A. Quark
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

International volunteering has become a popular way for students to travel, engage in rewarding service, and build credentials of global citizenship for a competitive job market. In this context, we explore a puzzling phenomenon: why would a group of students choose to end a seemingly successful international volunteer program legitimized by affirmation from their community partner in the global South, their peers, and their institution? Research has shown that international volunteering organizations, and development organizations more broadly, are resilient, even amid critique, as they continually reconstruct their legitimacy vis-à-vis donors. We argue, however, that student volunteer organizations that intentionally foster reflexivity in development work may choose organizational demise after grappling with the tensions inherent in international alternative breaks. These volunteer programs train students in critical perspectives on international development, yet the institutional conditions under which they operate, as well as some of their implicit neoliberal assumptions, frustrate the realization of this critique in practice. Students develop critical and neoliberal anxieties that lead them not only to indict the moral legitimacy of the organization but also to reject the credentials and career paths of global citizenship they initially sought to attain.
国际另类断裂的解剖
国际志愿服务已经成为学生旅行、参与有回报的服务以及为竞争激烈的就业市场建立全球公民资格证书的一种流行方式。在此背景下,我们探讨了一个令人困惑的现象:为什么一群学生会选择结束一个看似成功的国际志愿者计划,这个计划得到了他们在全球南方的社区伙伴、同龄人和机构的肯定?研究表明,国际志愿组织和更广泛的发展组织即使在批评中也具有弹性,因为它们不断重建自己在-à-vis捐助者面前的合法性。然而,我们认为,那些有意在发展工作中培养反身性的学生志愿者组织,在应对国际替代中断中固有的紧张关系后,可能会选择组织消亡。这些志愿者项目培养学生对国际发展的批判性观点,然而,他们运作的制度条件,以及他们隐含的一些新自由主义假设,在实践中阻碍了这种批评的实现。学生们产生了批判和新自由主义的焦虑,这不仅导致他们控诉组织的道德合法性,而且拒绝了他们最初寻求获得的全球公民资格和职业道路。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Sociology of Development
Sociology of Development Social Sciences-Development
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
8.30%
发文量
14
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