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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor Principal: Milind Natraj Muthiah
Formato: Recurso digital
Idioma:inglés
Publicado: Zenodo 2025
Subjects:
Acceso en liña:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15570762
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Table of Contents:
  • <p dir="ltr">Voluntourism, or short-term international volunteering often undertaken by students, has earned justified criticism for prioritizing the volunteer’s experience while offering limited and sometimes harmful impact to host communities. It is also frequently accused of reinforcing stereotypes rooted in global power imbalances. This commentary argues that while such critiques are necessary and warranted, they risk dismissing all short-term service efforts as equally flawed. This commentary examines how Global Brigades (GB) avoids the most common pitfalls of voluntourism: unqualified participation, lack of continuity, and community disempowerment. GB’s model is built around long-term development plans, data-driven decision-making, and year-round infrastructure led by trained Community Health Workers. Volunteers operate in clearly defined, supervised roles and are prepared through orientations that emphasize humility and cultural sensitivity. The result is a program that not only strengthens care delivery but also fosters genuine cross-cultural learning. This piece calls for a more precise discourse that critiques extractive models without erasing those that prioritize equity, accountability, and partnership.</p>