Affective politics of Australian development volunteering

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

It is widely acknowledged that emotions play an important role in international development volunteering (IDV), but researchers are divided about how they matter. For some, Northern volunteering in the Global South is an expression of political agency and solidarity with distant strangers, while for others, it is a product of neoliberal techniques of government that mobilise emotions, labour and social practices of care without challenging the status quo. This paper seeks to disentangle these contradictory claims by examining how participants in an IDV programme experience and articulate emotions, and the context in which they mobilise these emotions to fortify or critique dominant power relations. Drawing on recent theorising about the role of affect and emotion in society, and on interviews collected in Cambodia and Peru, I aim to show how emotions are shaped through relations with humans as well as with history, place and foreign policies. Attending to spatial and temporal context is important to understanding how and why volunteerism’s affective relations can become sites for critiquing unequal relations and imagining development differently.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAffect, Emotions and Power in Development Studies Theory and Practice
EditorsTanya Jakimow
Place of PublicationOxon, UK
PublisherRoutledge, Taylor & Francis
Chapter5
Pages599-616
Number of pages17
ISBN (Electronic)978-1-003-45724-4
ISBN (Print)978-1-032-60032-1, 978-1-032-60034-5
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Publication series

NameThirdworlds
PublisherRoutledge

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 17 - Partnerships for the Goals
    SDG 17 Partnerships for the Goals

Keywords

  • development volunteering
  • development cooperation
  • emotion
  • Peru
  • Cambodia
  • Australia

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