Friday, 31 October 2014

OUGD403 Studio Brief 4 - Research

OUGD403 Studio Brief 4 - Research 

Poster design, research and influences 


The evolution and development of poster art has always been closely linked to technical advances in printmaking, notably lithography. Thus although the lithographic process was invented by Alois Senefelder (1771-1834) as far back as 1798, it had little impact on posters until the advent of chromolithography later in the 19th century. Even then, it wasn't until Jules Cheret (1836-1932) invented his convenient "three stone lithographic process" in the 1860s - allowing lithographers to produce a wide spectrum of colours from just three stones - that low-cost colour posters at last became a reality.
Interest in the poster was further enhanced in the 1890s by the emergence of Art Nouveau, Art Nouveau proved the ideal poster design, and dominated the Parisian poster scene up until the late 1900s. After World War I, Art Nouveau was seen as old-fashioned and irrelevant when compared to the new modernist God of Science and the dynamism of the Machine. This new technological reality was better represented by modern art movements such as Cubism, Futurism, Expressionism and others. More important than Constructivism, Futurism or Novecento was a new international style known as Art Deco. Showcased at the "Decorative Arts" Exposition of 1925 in Paris, and exactly in tune with the technological criteria of power and speed, Art Deco was marked by sleek geometrical forms, and strong, even garish, colours.
After World War II, advertising-posters everywhere declined in importance as the market was effectively taken over by photography, radio and later television. In addition, labour-intensive lithography was also becoming prohibitively expensive, causing advertisers to switch to cheaper but less colourful methods like offset printing and screen printing. As a result, by the 1960s - despite exceptional campaigns by post artists Bernard Villemot and Raymond Savignac - the poster was no more than a minor genre. Designers who might previously have been attracted to posters were now moving into illustration and other graphic designwork.




- David Carson 

An American Graphic Designer, David Carson has worldwide fame and is probably the most influential Graphic Designer of the nineties. His introduction of imaginative ideas in magazine design together with his use of experimental typography has gained him fame globally. Carson was the art director for the magazine Ray Gun in the early nineties.





- Paula Scher 

For more than three decades Paula Scher has been at the forefront of graphic design. Iconic, smart and unabashedly populist, her images have entered into the American vernacular. She began her career as an art director in the 1970s and early '80s, when her eclectic approach to typography became highly influential.



- Toulouse Lautrec

Henri Toulouse-Lautrec was a French painter, printmaker, draughtsman and illustrator whose immersion in the colourful and theatrical life of Paris in the late 1800s yielded a collection of exciting, elegant and provocative images of the modern and sometimes decadent life of those times. Lautrec eventually established himself as the premier poster artist of Paris and was often commissioned to advertise famous performers in his prints.






- Shepard Fairey 

Frank Shepard Fairey is an American contemporary street artist, graphic designer activist and illustrator who emerged from the skateboarding scene  He first became known for his "Andre the Giant Has a Posse" (OBEY) sticker campaign, in which he appropriated images from the comedic supermarket tabloid - Weekly World News. 
He became widely known during the 2008 U.S. presidential election for his Barack Obama "Hope" poster. The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston calls him one of today's best known and most influential street artists.




- Alphonse Mucha

Alfons Maria Mucha, often known in English and French as Alphonse Mucha, was a Czech Art Nouveau painter and decorative artist, known best for his distinct style. He produced many paintings, illustrations, advertisements, postcards, and designs.





- Milton Glaser


Milton Glaser is an American graphic designer, best known for the I ♥ NY logo, his Bob Dylan poster, the DC bullet logo used by DC Comics from 1977 to 2005, and the Brooklyn Brewery logo. 







- Saul Bass

Saul Bass was an American graphic designer and Academy Award winning filmmaker, best known for his design of motion picture title sequences, film posters, and corporate logos. Legendary graphic designer Saul Bass is rightly remembered for his incredible skill and seemingly unending creativity, a man who cared deeply about making things beautiful, even if no one else did. His work exists as a testament to the idea that good design can exist even in the most monetarily concerned places. From the late 1940’s until the early 1990’s, he created more than a dozen campaigns for films, with an even higher number dedicated to title sequences. Bass' work was risky, his posters were largely stripped down affairs that focused and strengthened attention rather than overwhelmed and scattered it into a million pieces. Colors were few, but bold in their application. The text and imagery itself was often treated similarly to a logo or a symbol: strong, simple, memorable, metaphorical, and easily applied to any number of other graphic applications.







Primary Research 

While on a trip to Paris for the weekend, I documented different posters that I saw on the street stalls. These photographs I took show the designs and style of Toulouse Lautrec and Alphonse Mucha. I really love this continental European design of art noveeau and art deco, I think although it is quite an outdated style, I still think it is still effective and very atheistically pleasing. 










Volunteer Poster Research


These are volunteer posters promoting volunteering. There main point of image is friendly photographs, depicting a volunteer looking after children, while the second image focuses more on the environment giving us a sense of culture. This would be interesting as a possibility could be playing off this idea in a controversial way, suggesting that the volunteers are harming the children rather than helping them.






This poster I find really useful and really depicts the message I want to portray. This will be an idea for one of the three posters, than 'Children are not tourist attractions.' The image is has a lot of impact on the viewer and is quite controversial, this is the same level of impact I would like my posters to have, but perhaps in a subtler way. This poster was taken from www.thinkchildsafe.org and is such a powerful image. It takes the belief of tourists that volunteering in an orphanages is fashionable and more about self fulfilment, and taking this literally to the children being in a glass box and us just taking picture of them, rather than our soul purpose to actually help them.






These are really effective posters campaigning about the harm done to children by placing them in orphanages. The image below is particularly striking to me as it is high impact like the images above. This idea is also something I could touch upon in my posters, the idea of the dissolution of bonds with volunteers and children in orphanages. I definitely would like to make one of my posters based around the harming effects of orphanages, and therefore these different posters are giving me a really interesting insight into what theme I could base it around. 







Social Awareness Posters


In addition to looking at volunteer advertisements and campaigns, I also found looking at social awareness posters useful as well. As the purpose of these is to inform and to be challenging or controversial, a tactic in which I would like to use within my designs, therefore looking into the ways in which certain campaigns, such as mental health, smoking etc can inform its viewers in a simple, minimal way. Although I think shock tactics do work, I really like the way in which this mental health poster has used such a simple illustration and use of text to create such an impact and really deliver its message. I think this is the route I would also like to take of creating something simplistic but high impact, I believe that its the minimal approach sometimes that can be most powerful. Also with shock tactics, I feel there is sometimes a danger of being insensitive, yet I do believe it has the most powerful effect out of all, but with my time restriction and the resources I have, I feel the simplistic approach will be best at this moment in time. 







OUGD403 Studio Brief 4 - Idea Generation


OUGD403 Studio Brief 4 - Idea Generation 


My initial ideas for a social awareness poster on my topic, is to focus on three different points:

1) 'Who are you really volunteering for?' 
   
 - The idea that volunteering abroad is not all about self-fulfilment, and this belief that we westerners have that we have the right to bestow our benevolence on people, while people visit when not knowing the language, having no skills or experience and no idea what the culture is like. 

2) Orphanages 
- Orphanages are turning into a sort of business because of the high demand of volunteers wanting to volunteer in orphanages. While the number of orphans have decreased, there has been a rise in unlicensed orphanages with the rise of tourism in developing countries. This leads to danger of children being exploited and growing attached to the tourists who are soon to leave them, presenting the problem with short term presence. 

3) 'Rite of Passage for Westerners'
- Volunteering has become 'fashionable' with westerners, particularly students. We need to have the right attitude towards volunteering, going back to my first and second point, that children are not tourist attractions. We need to learn how to make a lasting impact and give transferable skills so its beneficial in the long run.

From these points I make initial drawings from my ideas. For the text only poster, I think a simple message with direct address or bold lettering will work well as I feel that it is easy to portray my message and is eye capturing for viewers. From my knowledge I know that social awareness posters use a simple but powerful tactic, particularly through the use of image. However due to the restrictions of the brief, I wanted to create a minimal, simplistic but powerful poster. In addition, I  did not want to use photographs for my posters, as I knew I did not have access to the right people or locations to take my own photographs, and I didn't want to take a photograph off the internet. Therefore I thought the use of silhouettes and diagrams might work to convey my message, but this is something I need to experiment and develop with. 










OUGD403 Studio Brief 4 - Brief


                           Studio Brief 04 - Message & Delivery - Delivery


Module ID: OUGD403
Module Leader: Simon Harrison 
Module Deadline: 17/11/14 (14:00)
Brief Deadline: 14/11/14 (09:30) 
Outcomes Assessed: 4A4, 4B3, 4C3, 4C4, 4D3



Studio Brief


Produce designs for a set of three high impact posters that deliver a personal identified message derived from your research into part one of this brief.

The three posters should work as a set or series and be visually consistent. The first must be produced solely using type, the second solely with image and the third a combination of both type and image..



Background / Considerations


Focus on what you are trying to say and avoid generalisations and vague messages.



Keep it simple and to the point.



Are you making a statement, delivering facts or posing a question?



You should consider and investigate a broad range of possible visual solutions before making your design decisions.



Tone of Voice.



Memorable, immediate high impact and clear.



Challenging, potentially controversial but appropriate and not offensive.



Factual, statistical, informed and specific.



Mandatory Requirements


Each poster should be supported by comprehensive visual research into frame format, composition and content.

Use notebooks to document your ideas. Use worksheets to develop your visuals investigation.



Deliverables


You are restricted to the use of two colours plus stock.

Three Posters ( 2:1 format) presented at A3 scale (but not A3 format).





For part one of this brief I chose to research into the story of 'Does Volunteering in a third world country help or harm?' From my research, I found a lot of evidence supporting how it can hinder the development of third world countries and particularly have negative effects on children. Therefore I decided to focus my research and presentation on how volunteering can have negative effects, which is what I will also focus my posters on. My aim is to create social awareness posters on this topic that are challenging or controversial.  



Thursday, 30 October 2014

OUGD403 Studio Brief 3 - Design Boards & Presentation



OUGD403 Studio Brief 3 - Design Boards & Presentation 




















OUGD403 Studio Brief 3



Studio Brief 03 - Message & Delivery - Research




Module ID: OUGD403
Module Leader: Simon Harrison 

Module Deadline: 17/11/14 (14:00)
Brief Deadline: 31/10/14 (09:30) 
Outcomes Assessed: 4A4, 4B3, 4C3, 4C4, 4D3


Studio Brief


Create a body of visual research in response to a story, issue or theme found in the national press tomorrow, Saturday 25th October..



Background / Considerations


The willingness and ability to formulate informed opinions about your subject matter is an essential skill for a graphic designer.

In addition to being aware of events, concerns and the (un)popularly held opinions of the world around you, you also need to consider the tone of voice with which they are reported.

It is important that you read the stories thoroughly and research issues that are raised fully before committing your self to a visual opinion.

You can be serious, humorous, questioning, opinionated, bold, or subtle.

Your research should be broad and varied and should include but not be limited to; statistical, empirical (opinions), and personal.

Use a variety of approaches to your gathering of research, including editorial coverage in local, national and international press via both print and web. You should aim to observe the trends and differences between different formats of communication. Be aware of and include in your research and documentation the tone of voice, the use of images, typography and layout/composition.


Mandatory Requirements


The story, issue or theme must come from a newspaper published on Saturday 25th October..



Deliverables


A body of research into the story, issue or theme of your choice.

A physical copy of the newspaper.


Chosen Story: 'Voluntourism' - Does it do more harm than good? 


Saturday Newspaper Articles 


i On Saturday Newspaper - 'Volunteering in Third World 'can harm, not help'

- Become Fashionable 
- Rite of passage for a generation of young Britons
- Gap Year trend is being blamed for potentially fueling child abuse in the host communities 
- Rise of tourists wanting to work in orphanages in countries such as Nepal and Cambodia could actually be leading to children being abandoned or abducted, just to meet the demand
- Many expensive, commercial volunteering opportunities ended up exploiting those offering help, as well as harming the lives of those who are meant to be on the receiving end
- Volunteers often have unfulfilling and disappointing experiences 
- Volunteer projects can prevent local workers from getting much-needed jobs
- Institutions waste time and money looking after volunteers and upgrading facilities 
- Abused or abandoned children form emotional attachments to the visitors, who increase their trauma by disappearing back home after a few weeks
- In most cases people would be far better (and have more rewarding experience) volunteering at home and spending their money travelling 

Bad Gap Year 
Volunteers are urged to avoid travelling to work in orphanages after a United Nations Children's Fund report found the number of children being put into care was soaring to cater for the demand of wealthy tourists seeking to help them. The study said that the number of orphanages in Cambodia had risen by 75% in five years, while up to 80% of children in orphanages in Nepal had a least one parent still alive. 

Good Volunteering 
Age UK offers a raft of opportunities for young people to help older members of their own communities. Isolation is one of the most damaging factors to the physical and mental well being of senior citizens. Volunteers are urged to spend time visiting older neighbours, doing household chores, working in the garden or helping them get online.   



The Independent - 'Gap-year volunteer projects could do more harm than good' 

-Its become fashionable, or a rite of passage for young Britons
- Gap year trend is fuelling child abuse
- Local children are being abandoned or abducted to meet the demand of 'voluntourism'
- Tourism Concerned's executive director Mark Watson, said while it was commendable, volunteer opportunities end up exploiting both those offering to help and harming the lives of those meant to be on the receiving end 
- Placement can prevent local workers from getting much needed job
- Institutions waste time looking after the volunteers and spend money on upgrading their facilities
- Children form emotional attachments to the visitors who increase their trauma by disappearing back home
- A study in Unicef in Nepal found that 85% of children in the orphanages they visited had a least one parent still alive







Online Articles and Information 

The Guardian -  Before you pay to volunteer abroad, think of the harm you might do

- The most direct attempt to lure tourists, is children seducing them with wide eyes and heart-wrenching stories of abandonment
- Orphanages are a booming business trading on guilt
- Westerners take pity on the children and end up creating a grotesque market that capitalises on their concerns. This is the dark side of our desire to help the developing world.
- An official study found just a quarter of children in these so-called orphanages have actually lost both parents. And these private ventures are proliferating fast: the numbers increased by 65% in just three years.
- Encouraging a dependency culture
- Wealthy tourists prevent local workers from getting much-needed jobs, especially when they pay to volunteer; hard-pressed institutions waste time looking after them and money upgrading facilities
- Abused or abandoned children form emotional attachments to the visitors, who increase their trauma by disappearing back home
- Voluntary Service Overseas even condemned this burgeoning industry as a new form of colonialism. VSO asked what right unqualified British teenagers had to impose their desire to do good at schools in developing countries.
- these trips raise profound questions about misplaced idealism and misconceived attitudes.
- Critics argue that dropping in to take photographs of orphaned children, who may have seen parents recently waste to death, reduces them to the status of lions and zebras on the veld.
- What would we say if unchecked foreigners went into our children's homes to cuddle and care for the kids? We would be shocked, so why should standards be lowered in the developing world? Yes, resources might be in short supply, but just as here, experts want children in the family environment or fostered in loving homes, not in the exploding number of substandard institutions
- The harsh truth is that "voluntourism" is more about the self-fulfilment of westerners than the needs of developing nations
- In Ghana, just as in South Africa and Cambodia, there has been a boom in unregistered orphanages
- Last year, police investigated one after the rape of an eight-month-old boy and discovered 27 of the 32 children were not orphans
- A government study found up to 90% of the estimated 4,500 children in orphanages had at least one parent and only eight of the 148 orphanages were licensed
- Unicef officials said children's welfare was secondary to profits and it is thought less than one-third of income goes on child care
- Unless we have time and transferable skills, we might do better to travel, trade and spend money in developing countries



The New York Times - Can 'Voluntourism' Make a Difference? 

Debates:

Rafia Zakaria - Poverty Is Not a Spectacle


- The problem with voluntourism is that it treats receiving communities as passive objects of the visiting Westerner’s quest for saviordom
- Poverty and its very real indignities give way to a new form of exploitation, those suffering put on stage to provoke a lucky-me gratitude for the voluntourist’s ordinary life back home
- survivors of domestic violence do not have to parade their scars before donors to access shelters. If their dignity is protected, so must that of those in other exotic places whose pain is just as complicated and as embedded in larger narratives as our own and deserves just as much respect


Chris Johnson - Work Hard; Enjoy the Experience


- Our Global Builders volunteers have the opportunity to see the world beyond the beaten tourist paths and immerse themselves in other cultures in ways few other Americans do
- Building homes is hardly easy or token work
- If our volunteers want to kick up their feet at the end of the day to take in a sunset on the Nicaraguan coast or snap some selfies with smiling children in India, they’ve earned that right.
- We see nothing wrong with volunteers enjoying their work, so long as it yields tangible and enduring results


Pippa Biddle - Find Real Ways to Help


- The problem with many volunteer trips is that good intentions are often not enough. Wanting to create change does not necessarily mean that you have the skills or access to the resources needed to make that happen
- Young volunteers offer unique sets of skills and experiences that most current placement organizations don’t do enough to take advantage of
- By sending volunteers to do complicated tasks, we set them up for failure and increase the likelihood that their trips become poverty tourism rather than productive service work


Amy Ernst - Volunteer Abroad, but Evaluate the Needs


- Umbrella organizations work on a larger scale because they have solid funding and bureaucratic systems in place, but those systems can also be limiting
- Volunteering alone requires long-term commitment, follow-through and a higher level of personal accountability
- Having more freedom to help others also offers more opportunities to cause them harm
- Accountability and humility are key. You may not have a training booklet telling you what’s right or wrong, but local experts exist everywhere. And if you look hard enough, you will find that all skills are needed; you just need to figure out where and how to apply them in the appropriate context


Linda Richter - The Problem With a Short Term Presence


- Examples of misguided volunteering efforts abound, especially when people want to help AIDS orphans in southern and eastern Africa
- About 86 percent have a surviving parent, usually their mother. Of the remaining children, almost all live within their extended families, cared for by grandparents, aunts, older siblings and others
- The majority of children in orphanages are there because of poverty rather than because their parents have died. Destitute parents may place their children in orphanages in the hope that their child will receive meals, clothing and schooling
- The better way to help such desperate families is to support them to keep their children at home, where a child can be part of their community for the rest of their lives
- A characteristic of children who are placed in orphanages at a young age is that they have disturbed attachments with caring adults. This is associated with the changing volunteer staff, with children becoming attached to one person after another in their quest for intimacy and security. This causes their relationships with other people to be disturbed and can result in a range of adjustment and mental health problems. When volunteers stay in orphanages for short periods of time, children become attached to them too, and later it becomes another broken relationship in a long line of disappointments
- While children in orphanages long for affection and cling to any adult who responds to them, these short-term relationships are very unhelpful to the child in the longer term. What we all should be working for are secure family placements for children in residential care



The Independent - Voluntourism is a 'waste of time and money' - and gappers are better off working in Britain



- Volunteers would often do more good staying at home and assisting communities on their own doorstep
- Work in a developing country has become one of the fastest-growing phenomena in the global travel industry
- Altruistic young travellers can end up doing more harm than good to their host communities, even potentially fuelling child abuse
- Mounting concern that the desire to work in orphanages in countries such as Cambodia and Nepal is actually be leading to the abandonment or even abduction of children from their parents
- Philippa Biddle, who described taking part in a development project building an orphanage and library in Tanzania. She said each night local men dismantled the structurally unsound work they had done – relaying bricks and resetting timbers whilst the students slept. “Basically, we failed at the sole purpose of our being there. It would have been more cost effective, stimulative of the local economy, and efficient for the orphanage to take our money and hire locals to do the work, but there we were trying to build straight walls without a level,” she recalled.


Verge Magazine - Does Volunteering abroad do more harm than good? 

- According to the South Africa-based Human Sciences Research Council, short-term 'voluntourism' trips undertaken by people with excess funds but limited relevant skill sets can actually undermine local workers and, since these are usually short-term placements, they can also create a sense of abandonment for many of the impoverished children who are supposed to be the beneficiaries of the work
- Meanwhile, a piece by National Public Radio (NPR) investigated a similar concern by the South African government over "AIDS orphan tourism," where - despite their good intentions - overseas volunteers build bonds with children in orphanages and childcare centres that ultimately result in feelings of abandonment on the part of the kids when the voluntourists return home with a sense of having made their contribution
- The sad truth is that real, sustainable, long-term development requires a lot of hard work from people with specific skill sets and involvement from the communities themselves, among other things. For many volunteer programs in developing countries, the main attraction is the money that paying voluntourists can provide, not necessarily the help that they can offer
- Consider a long-term volunteer placement and make sure that the program is sustainable, and especially if you're volunteering with children, make the effort to continue the relationships you've created once you've returned home

The Telegraph - Volunteer holidays do more harm than good
- Gap year volunteers risk undermining local workers and hindering long-term development in impoverished countries, according to a new study
- Students who volunteered abroad risked undermining local workers and exploiting the victims of poverty
- Because 'voluntourist' contributions are often brief, the work that can be done is usually low-skilled. As a result, there is a real danger of voluntourists crowding out local workers, especially when people are prepared to pay for the privilege to volunteer
- Unfortunately, many of the children they leave behind have experienced another abandonment to the detriment of their short- and long-term emotional and social development
- Prof Richter said Western gap-year students should be discouraged from trying to boost their own self-esteem at the expense of the lives their volunteering would touch


CNN Travel - Does Voluntourism do more harm than good?


- A system has emerged in which parents will rent their children out for the day to play with gullible backpackers, creating fraudulent orphanages in response to visitors’ demand for them
- Even activities as banal as painting walls or building houses are fraught with ethical concerns
- Are building materials and technical skills sourced locally, to benefit merchants and artisans in the community, or are they simply shipped in from outside?
- Children can go back to their families instead of being pimped out as objects of affection, and are likely to emerge as psychologically healthier adults when not treated as an emotional plaything
- It's difficult to measure the value of this first-hand understanding against the wish to help needy communities as efficiently as possible
- there is a world of difference between ill-considered decisions taken for the purpose of stroking a traveler's ego, and subjective decisions to volunteer after properly considering as much of the moral and practical detail of your engagement as possible

The Seattle Globalist - Want to volunteer abroad? How to actually make a difference


- There’s plenty of valuable work to be done, travel and living expenses are low, and even the most challenging volunteer position might look easy compared to trying to find a job right out of college these days
- At best, it’s opportunity for a broadened perspective on a vast and complex world, and a chance to empower others
- The first step to any effective volunteer experience is honestly asking yourself why you want to go. For professional experience in international development? To learn a particular hard skill? To work on a social justice issue close to your heart? For adventure?
- Skill-based volunteering is often the best way of avoiding an experience that drains resources of the host organization with no added benefit to their project.
- As westerners, we come equipped with many skills and assets we may not even be aware of; our English language proficiency, our comfort with technology and the internet, our experience with organizational tools like excel, powerpoint, and word processing, perhaps even grantwriting or medical or legal expertise
- Look for organizations with local staff, or who partner with local grassroots groups. They’re more likely to be in touch with the realities and needs of the communities on the ground
- A 2010 report on Orphan Tourism by the Human Sciences Research Council called orphanhood a ‘globally circulated commodity’, and expressed concerns about the effectiveness of orphanages that catered to the needs of tourists rather than the orphans themselves, many traumatized by the constant ebb and flow of personal attachments as volunteers cycle through facilities
- It takes time to work through the awkwardness of cultural difference, and the painful histories of colonialism, racism, and ethnocentrism. But the relationships you build when investing real time and energy in a local community are probably the greatest reward you can get out of international volunteerism
- Volunteering abroad is a privilege. If you have the education and skills required to land a good volunteer gig, and the time, money, required to actually go, you are one of a lucky few. Take a humble, flexible and thoughtful approach about your volunteer experience. It will mean the difference between a well-intentioned failure and a truly meaningful experience for everyone involved.


The Huffington Post - The Gap Year Dilemma: To Volunteer or Not Volunteer 


- Last month, tour operator ResponsibleTravel.com made the bold choice of removing all orphanage volunteering holidays from their site. Co-founder Justin Francis took to the site's blog to explain the company's growing concerns about child welfare and care standards. Are these orphanage volunteering projects were actually doing more harm than good?Justin said they are now working with industry leaders to develop best practice guidelines and criteria for child-focused volunteer trips. "We want to ensure we only market volunteer trips that we have 100% trust in. We hope that by being independently created, the new criteria will help sustain the exemplary operators while removing those that may potentially tarnish the sector."
- Booking a volunteering holiday with a bad - or often just not 'responsible' - travel operator could mean your month spent helping local school children in Mali amounts to nothing more than a glorified package holiday. A trip characterised in the worst terms: first world do-gooders embarking on a kind of 'poverty tourism', the experience of which they share solemnly with friends on their comfortable return
- The desire to take holidays that make a difference, or to volunteer one's time and skills overseas, shouldn't be mocked as a Western, middle-class cliché - responsible travel can benefit everyone
- Real reviews on independent forums are a good start. Word of mouth is still the greatest marketing tool so genuine first-hand reviews and recommendations from travellers can begin to sort the good from the bad


Responsible Volunteering - What makes a successful volunteer placement?
- Spend some time researching the different organisations offering volunteering placements and think about what type of organisation suits you best
- Try to read between the lines of the glossy images and marketing-language to really understand what these organisations are offering and how they work. There are many different types of volunteering opportunities so take some time to think about what interests you, what skills you have which you could contribute to a project and what you want to get out of the experience. You should also consider your own needs and limitations in terms of the location of your placement, living conditions and level of support
- One key thing that any overseas volunteering placement should do is benefit the local people who live in the area where you are volunteering. You are giving your time (and usually money) to volunteer and it is vital that what you are doing is needed and wanted and that your presence brings some economic benefits to the local community
- Think about the role you will be doing, how it might be of use and how sustainable it is – when you leave, what will happen next? It is also essential that by volunteering, you are not displacing paid jobs and taking employment opportunities away from local people
- If you are volunteering in a developing country, a successful placement will need to have some kind of measurable impact. This could be the number of people trained in a certain skill, or the amount of funds raised for a community project, the installation of a new water tank or setting up an accounting system for a micro-enterprise and most importantly, training a staff member how to continue using it
- Being able to solve practical problems, set-up simple administrative systems, be good with computers or knowing how to write a proposal and many other skills that you may use in your day to day work are all extremely useful for volunteering
- Look for an organisation who will take the time to review what skills you have and actively match you to placements based on this. By using your skills, you will go a long way to having a successful placement
- Try to find a placement that has very specific objectives that can be realistically achieved in the timeframe and do as much as you can to prepare in advance, the longer you can commit to volunteering overseas, the more you can achieve and the more satisfying the experience will be. You will have more time to get to know local people, the culture and learn the language, allowing you to communicate and gain a better understanding of the local context
- Research and read as much as possible about where you are going. Learn about the history, culture, development issues and practicalities of living there and learn some key phrases and words of the local language. Find out about appropriate dress code, what kind of food will be available and what facilities you will have in your accommodation. This will help you prepare yourself and take the right things with you
- Having the right attitude and personal qualities can go a long way towards a successful volunteering experience
- It helps to start out with a realistic attitude and manage your expectations of what you can achieve during your placement and focus on small-steps and identifying sustainable solutions




Opinions


- 'I think its true as people make connections, causing more emotional pain

- 'I think its more about self fulfilment rather than helping them'

- 'Its Exposing them to things they can never have'

- 'Unhealthy for people to keep leaving orphans once they have visited'

- Helps if passing on education, not necessarily money'

- It helps initially but I think they might become too reliant on charity and their corrupt governments need to be taught how to help their people'

'I was going to volunteer while I was in South East Asia, we wanted to go to a local based project so we knew it has a good cause and is not a money making thing, but when we got to one in Cambodia we didn't feel comfortable as it seemed quite dodgy and a money making scheme, so we didn't do it in the end'



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