TY - JOUR
T1 - How to win friends and influence nations
T2 - The international history of Development Volunteering
AU - Sobocinska, Agnieszka
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2017 Cambridge University Press.
PY - 2017/3/1
Y1 - 2017/3/1
N2 - This article traces the personal and institutional networks that facilitated the transnational spread of Development Volunteering in the 1950s and 1960s. Examining Australia's Volunteer Graduate Scheme, Britain's Voluntary Service Overseas, and the United States Peace Corps, it destabilizes each nation's claims to pioneering Development Volunteering, and interrogates the reasons for these claims. Once national frames are removed, broader patterns come into view. This article reveals that Development Volunteering held multiple meanings, as discourses of development, colonialism, and control existed alongside those of youthful idealism and national benevolence. It argues that, by involving 'ordinary' people in international development and by re-inscribing colonial-era divisions between the developed and developing worlds, Development Volunteering contributed to the broader process by which colonial discourses were translated into the postcolonial lexicon of development.
AB - This article traces the personal and institutional networks that facilitated the transnational spread of Development Volunteering in the 1950s and 1960s. Examining Australia's Volunteer Graduate Scheme, Britain's Voluntary Service Overseas, and the United States Peace Corps, it destabilizes each nation's claims to pioneering Development Volunteering, and interrogates the reasons for these claims. Once national frames are removed, broader patterns come into view. This article reveals that Development Volunteering held multiple meanings, as discourses of development, colonialism, and control existed alongside those of youthful idealism and national benevolence. It argues that, by involving 'ordinary' people in international development and by re-inscribing colonial-era divisions between the developed and developing worlds, Development Volunteering contributed to the broader process by which colonial discourses were translated into the postcolonial lexicon of development.
KW - Peace Corps
KW - development discourse
KW - foreign aid
KW - international development
KW - volunteering
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85012195511&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S1740022816000334
DO - 10.1017/S1740022816000334
M3 - Article
SN - 1740-0228
VL - 12
SP - 49
EP - 73
JO - Journal of Global History
JF - Journal of Global History
IS - 1
ER -