Citizen aid
Allison Schnable
Chapter 17 in Handbook of Aid and Development, 2024, pp 275-287 from Edward Elgar Publishing
Abstract:
Citizen aid - small-scale, privately-funded, volunteer-driven, transnational assistance - aims to “cut out the middlemen” between aid givers and receivers. This chapter describes the scope of citizen aid and makes three claims that highlight its distinctions from conventional, professionalized aid. First, citizen aid is driven not just by a desire to help, but by a desire to connect. This drive to create personal relationships with recipients also makes citizen aid practices in fundraising, monitoring, and evaluation diverge from professionalized actors. Second, freed of the professionalized development field’s pressures, citizen aid givers articulate a vision of development that emphasizes individual transformation. Third, citizen aid efforts typically work in isolation from existing development institutions - making it difficult to collaborate for broader development goals. These characteristics of citizen aid shed light on a tension at the heart of the public’s support for aid: whether aid is essentially a technocratic project or a moral, expressive one.
Keywords: Development Studies; Geography; Politics and Public Policy Sociology and Social Policy (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
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