Teaching Human Rights at the Tertiary Level: Addressing the ‘Knowing–Doing Gap’ through a Role-Based Simulation Approach
Author(s)
Banki, SusanKeywords
experiential learning; higher education; human rights activism; human rights education; role-based learning160803
160809
FoR::220104 - Human Rights and Justice Issues
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Critiques of the voluntourism industry focus on power imbalances, colonial legacies, and white privilege. Drawing on the literatures of development and voluntourism to find points of comparison, we argue that the voluntourism industry reflects myriad de-velopment problems, such as structural challenges, the fungibility of aid, corruption, representation, worker narratives, and temporality. We assert that many of the prob-lems inherent in voluntourism could be remedied by the evolution of a contract norm between volunteers and their local partners, where reciprocity and transparency might practically serve as a corrective to voluntourism's most entrenched problemsDepartment of Sociology and Social Policy
Date
2019-08-29Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:ses.library.usyd.edu.au:2123/20994Susan Banki, Elisabeth Valiente-Riedl, Paul Duffill, Teaching Human Rights at the Tertiary Level: Addressing the ‘Knowing–Doing Gap’ through a Role-Based Simulation Approach, Journal of Human Rights Practice, Volume 6, Issue 2, July 2014, Page 387, https://doi.org/10.1093/jhuman/huu005
http://hdl.handle.net/2123/20994
https://doi.org/10.1093/jhuman/huu005