23 February 2014

Why voluntourism might even just do some good

When Pippa Biddle wrote last week about "the problem with little white girls," she was adding to a rich vein of development self-flagellation. I just ventured to google "why voluntourism is good," and the top 3 hits were:
"Beware the voluntourists intent on doing good"
"Is voluntourism doing any good? No!"
"Does 'voluntourism' do more harm than good?"
Pippa writes of her own experience as a voluntourist, including the wonderful story of the Tanzanians staying up all night to rebuild the wall that the white American girls messed up, so they wouldn't know what a terrible job they did.
"It would have been more cost effective, stimulative of the local economy, and efficient for the orphanage to take our money and hire locals to do the work, but there we were trying to build straight walls without a level."
But here's the thing - if Pippa had never gone to Tanzania, she would never have sent her money there. We know this. Despite the dizzying scale of global inequality, the vast majority of charitable spending by individuals in rich countries is spent in rich countries, not poor ones. In the UK just 10% goes overseas. 

And for good reasons. Why do we give? Our giving is driven by empathy. And we can't empathise with 6 billion people at the same time. There's just too much suffering to worry about it all - "we would be in a permanent emotional turmoil". And so we use filters, including critically that our familiarity with a person matters, and our similarity and identification matter.

That is why the Kristof uses "bridge characters":
"The problem that I face — my challenge as a writer — in trying to get readers to care about something like Eastern Congo, is that frankly, the moment a reader sees that I’m writing about Central Africa, for an awful lot of them, that’s the moment to turn the page. It’s very hard to get people to care about distant crises like that. 
One way of getting people to read at least a few grafs in is to have some kind of a foreign protagonist, some American who they can identify with as a bridge character. And so if this is a way I can get people to care about foreign countries, to read about them, ideally, to get a little bit more involved, then I plead guilty."
Or think about the story of Solomon Northup in 12 Years a Slave - I feel almost ashamed to admit, but it is clear that it was so harrowing because he is a middle class guy from New York - someone familiar who we can identify with.

Spending time living in or even briefly visiting a developing country can let you skip the bridge characters. You are now familiar with, and can identify with, a handful of the millions of people living in societies with such a profoundly worse set of opportunities to those of us born in rich countries. That matters. There's a sad irony that having made the empathetic leap, so many who work in development then seem to lose their empathy with the uninitiated. Having made a connection with someone living in extreme poverty, we forget how easy it was to not care before we had made that connection. I'd bet that the vast majority of development workers, even the most hardened economists, really got their passion from some form of real human interaction, not abstract analysis, and yet we pour scorn on young kids who venture out trying to have their own interactions and make their own connections, building their own cross-cultural empathy, because voluntourism is tacky. Does it really matter if it is tacky?

In terms of immediate development impact, village voluntourism is probably mostly irrelevant. We could spend time doing careful cost-benefit analysis of the value for money of having American teenagers build brick walls in Tanzania, or we could reflect on the 90% of our collective charitable impulse which goes on other rich people, the 99% of our government spending which goes on other rich people, or our narcissistic trade and immigration policies which help other rich people, and consider instead what it might take to get rich people to actually really give a fuck about global poverty, and that maybe just maybe that might come through actually living and working with people, even if just for a short time. Travel really does broaden the mind (there is even evidence, some of it randomised). If tacky white saviour marketing for a fundamentally useless project is what it takes to grab some attention away from a video of a cat on youtube, maybe that's worth it?

There is a German translation of this article on wegweiser-freiwilligenarbeit.com

10 comments:

Anh said...

It's not the tackiness that is the issue, it's the "foreign savior thinking they can do it best" mentality that is the issue. Why is it okay to use someone else's LIFE as a personal lesson? It's not.

rovingbandit said...

How are you "using" someone else just by going to hang out in their village?

Volunteering Guide said...

Congratulations to the author, we absolutely agree with you! We would love to publish a translation of this article on our German portal for volunteering http://www.wegweiser-freiwilligenarbeit.com/, what do you think about this?

rovingbandit said...

Feel free, please just include a link to my website,

Many thanks,

Lee

Volunteering Guide said...

Awesome, thank you!

All the best

Peter Mustafa Jones said...

Hey Lee,

I think that you raise a good point that voluntourism leads
to a greater understanding of the world although it does not necessarily always
create a positive, long-term change for the visited community like "little
white girls (and boys)" think it does. However, I really don't like how
you refer to these people in undeveloped areas that you are advocating for.
Lumping all of these people together as citizens of "poor" countries
and those "living in societies with such a profoundly worse set of opportunities
to those of us born in rich countries" does not seem like empathy at all
to me. It seems like sympathy. Empathizing would be getting to know people,
finding commonalities that bridge the gap between you, and treating the other
person as an equal human. I don't mean to disrespect you as a person, because I
don’t know you, but your article and comments make it seem like you think
people in poor areas are like animals in a zoo: we go look at them, spend lots
of our “rich country” money there, and then
come back feeling like better citizens of the world. I hope that you keep
writing because this you raise some good points, but maybe you should
reconsider how you phrase things to avoid seeming patronizing to these “millions
of people” in “poor countries.”

rovingbandit said...

Peter,

How would you better phrase things? That there are millions of people born in poor countries, who have a profoundly worse set of opportunities to people born in rich countries, is just a very sad, grossly unjust, fact.
For avoidance of any doubt, let me be clear that I do not think that poor people are like animals in a zoo. That I think all people are equal is the reason I think there is such urgency to use all means at our disposal to address global inequality, and that includes the tourist industry, which is worth three times more than official aid ( http://www.rovingbandit.com/2010/02/tourism-and-poverty.html).

Lee

Peter Mustafa Jones said...

Hey Lee,


Thanks a lot for responding to me. I don't dispute your points at all. I totally see where you're coming from (although when you say something is a "fact," you should provide some substantial evidence). But, do you really think that the world is divided into rich countries and poor countries and that all of those born in rich countries are rich and have tons of opportunities and those that are born in poor countries are poor and have sub standard opportunities? If you do, then we disagree about that. Development is way more complex than that, as I'm sure you are aware. So, I think you should try to avoid over generalized statements like "there are millions of people born in poor countries, who have a profoundly worse set of opportunities to people born in rich countries" and say something like "opportunities are typically much more numerous for those who grow up with a higher standard of living than those born in underdeveloped regions of the world." Splitting the world into "rich" and "poor" is oversimplified and not representative of how things actually are, in my opinion. And imagine if you're one of these "poor" people reading your writing. Would you really want to be classified as poor and opportunity-less by someone from a "rich" country? I just think you need to show more tact because these are real people. We can't just lump them all together as "poor".

rovingbandit said...

Branko Milanovic is the authority on global inequality - take a look at Figure 7 of this paper - http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/WDSContentServer/IW3P/IB/2012/11/06/000158349_20121106085546/Rendered/PDF/wps6259.pdf
the poorest people in the US have higher incomes than the richest in India. Yes, there are also middle income countries such as China and Brazil for which there is substantial overlap, but then look at Figure 8, then is again almost no overlap between Germany and Cote d'Ivoire. Simply by virtue of being born in Germany, you have substantially better opportunities than someone born in Cote d'Ivoire. That means you are incredibly lucky. It absolutely *doesn't *mean you are smarter or harder working or better in any way at all, it is entirely good fortune, and that is terrible, but it is true, these are facts.

Peter Mustafa Jones said...

Again, I don't dispute your facts. I just think the way you're interpreting them somewhat bothers me. If you look at the same paper that you sent me in Figure 1, I think that you are solely focused on Concept 1 of inequality while I would argue that Concept 3 is more important. It looks at "the world as composed of individuals, not nations". Although it's just hypothetical in the paper, the author illustrates the poorest person and the second richest person as being from the same country, a middle income country. Therefore, you cannot take country's average GDP as representative of the entire country.

This brings me to my main complaint with your writing: refer to people as people. I know that your background is economics and therefore, it might sound normal to say this country makes this much money and is therefore rich and has lots of opportunities. This country makes this much money, which makes it poor and with fewer opportunities. Sure, that's a valid argument, but you just oversimplified the ENTIRE WORLD. Your article argues in favor of rich white kids going to "less fortunate" areas so they can be exposed to people different from themselves and have a greater understanding of the world. But, this awareness and empathy comes from meeting and interacting with real people, which you don't focus on. You focus on facts, labels (rich and poor), and the big picture (national level). Do you think that if "rich" countries just give tons of money to "poor" countries, everything would fix itself? No, development needs to be focused on what individuals and communities need most. That comes from interactions between people, not between countries.

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