Scholars have explored the ways that hierarchical North–South relations are preserved and reproduced in the spaces of international volunteering. Global structural inequalities are widely understood to permeate relations between volunteers and hosts where even the intimacies of empathy and care are ascribed values drawn out of North–South divides. This article has two objectives. First, to explore the affective experience of volunteering for development as a potential realm in which more equitable volunteer–host relations unfold, and second, to include hosts (not just volunteers) in writing on international volunteering. Negotiating the politics of representation, the main body of the article draws on empirical data from fieldwork in India ...
This article critically examines the geography of volunteering in relation to international developm...
Examining the everyday practices and feelings of volunteering, in particular their situated, emotion...
Despite decades of effort, international development has failed to meaningfully address the problems...
In this paper we use assemblage thinking to offer a new interrogation of the relationalities of volu...
This article explores the changing narratives of volunteering in development and the interplay of vo...
This article critically examines the geography of volunteering in relation to international developm...
In recent years, research has focussed on the ‘neoliberalization’ of volunteering programmes in the ...
In this paper we debate the interpretation of embodied experience on international volunteering plac...
Volunteering and development have often been explored through analyses of international volunteering...
This article explores the ways in which volunteering for development is changing in the context of t...
In this paper we debate the interpretation of embodied experience on international volunteering plac...
Volunteering overseas has become a popular activity among individuals from developed countries. Gove...
The role of international development volunteering (IDV) has evolved from the 1980’s, both in practi...
International volunteer service (IVS) has rapidly expanded in the last decade among its volunteer pa...
In Asia, and across the “global South”, volunteerism has grown enormously in the last two decades. H...
This article critically examines the geography of volunteering in relation to international developm...
Examining the everyday practices and feelings of volunteering, in particular their situated, emotion...
Despite decades of effort, international development has failed to meaningfully address the problems...
In this paper we use assemblage thinking to offer a new interrogation of the relationalities of volu...
This article explores the changing narratives of volunteering in development and the interplay of vo...
This article critically examines the geography of volunteering in relation to international developm...
In recent years, research has focussed on the ‘neoliberalization’ of volunteering programmes in the ...
In this paper we debate the interpretation of embodied experience on international volunteering plac...
Volunteering and development have often been explored through analyses of international volunteering...
This article explores the ways in which volunteering for development is changing in the context of t...
In this paper we debate the interpretation of embodied experience on international volunteering plac...
Volunteering overseas has become a popular activity among individuals from developed countries. Gove...
The role of international development volunteering (IDV) has evolved from the 1980’s, both in practi...
International volunteer service (IVS) has rapidly expanded in the last decade among its volunteer pa...
In Asia, and across the “global South”, volunteerism has grown enormously in the last two decades. H...
This article critically examines the geography of volunteering in relation to international developm...
Examining the everyday practices and feelings of volunteering, in particular their situated, emotion...
Despite decades of effort, international development has failed to meaningfully address the problems...