For over 50 years, more than 225,000 Peace Corps volunteers have
been placed in over 140 countries around the world, with the goals
of helping the recipient countries need for trained men and women,
to promote a better understanding of Americans for the foreign
nationals, and to promote a better understanding of other peoples
on the part of Americans. The Peace Corps program, proposed during
a 2 a.m. campaign stop on October 14, 1960 by America's Camelot,
was part idealism, part belief that the United States could help
Global South countries becoming independent. At the height of the
Cold War, the US and USSR were racing each other to the moon,
missiles in Turkey and in Cuba and walls in Berlin consumed the
archrivals; sending American graduates to remote villages seemed
ill-informed. Kennedy's Kiddie Korps was derided as ineffectual,
the volunteers accused of being CIA spies, and often, their work
made no sense to locals. The program would fall victim to the
vagaries of global geopolitics: in Peru, Yawar Malku (Blood of the
Condor), depicting American activities in the country, led to
volunteers being bundled out unceremoniously; in Tanzania, they
were excluded over Tanzania's objection to the Vietnam War. Despite
these challenges, the Peace Corps program shaped newly independent
countries in significant ways: in Ethiopia they constituted half
the secondary school teachers in 1961, in Tanzania they helped
survey and build roads, in Ghana and Nigeria they were integral in
the education systems, alongside other programs. Even in the
Philippines, formerly a U.S. colony, Peace Corps volunteers were
welcomed. Aside from these outcomes, the program had a foreign
policy component, advancing U.S. interests in the recipient
countries. Data shows that countries receiving volunteers
demonstrated congruence in foreign policy preferences with the
U.S., shown by voting behavior at the United Nations, a forum where
countries' actions and preferences and signaling is evident.
Volunteer-recipient countries particularly voted with the U.S. on
Key Votes. Thus, Peace Corps volunteers who function as citizen
diplomats, helped countries shape their foreign policy towards the
U.S., demonstrating the viability of soft power in international
relations.
General
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