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Change a Life, Change your Own - Child Sponsorship, the Discourse of Development, and the Production of Ethical Subjects (Paperback)
Loot Price: R533
Discovery Miles 5 330
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Change a Life, Change your Own - Child Sponsorship, the Discourse of Development, and the Production of Ethical Subjects (Paperback)
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Loot Price R533
Discovery Miles 5 330
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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"Change a Life, Change Your Own is a long-overdue adult discussion
about how child sponsorship, a spectacularly successful fundraising
tool, infantilizes both donor and recipient, turning good
intentions into paternalism and reinforcing stereotypical Western
ideas about helplessness and hopelessness in developing countries."
- Ian Smillie, author of The Charity of Nations, Freedom from Want,
and Diamonds "Change a Life. Change Your Own." "For less than a
dollar a day." "For the cost of one coffee a day." With these
slogans, and their accompanying images of poor children, some of
the world's largest development organizations invite the global
North to engage in one of their most prominent and successful
fundraising techniques: child sponsorship. But as Peter Ove argues
in Change a Life, Change Your Own, child sponsorship is successful
not because it addresses the needs of poor children, but because it
helps position what it means to live ethically in an unequal and
unjust world. In this way, child sponsorship is seen as more than
an effective marketing tool; it is a powerful mechanism for
spreading particular ideas about the global South, the global North
and the relationship between the two. Through sponsorship, the
desire to raise money, secure "appropriate" childhoods, and become
better people ends up taking priority over the goal of living
together well on a global scale. Drawing on in-depth interviews
with child sponsors and sponsorship staff, Change a Life, Change
Your Own explores the contexts in which sponsorship promotional
material is produced, interpreted and acted upon. This is not an
expose on the use of sponsorship dollars or high administrative
costs; it is a clearly written and compelling account of how the
problem of development is constructed such that child sponsorship
is seen to be a rational and ethical solution.
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