- Volunteer travel
Volunteer Travel is travel which includes volunteering some time furthering a charitable cause for which the participant receives no remuneration. Voluntourism trips or volunteer vacations often involve extended stays in remote destinations, wearing hefty price tags. With such high barriers surrounding these trips, many travelers consider volunteer vacations simply out of reach. In recent years, bite-sized volunteer vacations have grown in popularity. The types of volunteer vacations are diverse, from low-skill work cleaning up local wildlife areas to providing high-skill medical aid in a foreign country.
Originally most volunteer vacations were undertaken by people with a direct connection to a particular cause and were considered more as short term, intense
volunteer projects rather than vacations. [cite news |first=Douglas |last= McGray |title="Going the Distance" |url=http://www.travelandleisure.com/articles/going-the-distance-february-2004 |publisher=Travel and Leisure Magazine |date=February 2004|accessdate=2008-01-20] Many of these organizations were long-standing international development assistance organizations which placed short-term volunteers on community development project sites.During the 1990s the
travel industry developed niche products and firms to provide volunteer vacations to people who had no previous experience with a cause, and to cater to the increasing number of young people takinggap year s.Fact|date=October 2007 These providers expanded the market but also drew criticism for the impact of their methods. At the same time, the first edition of "Volunteer Vacations" by Bill McMillon was published, featuring under 200 non-profit organizations which facilitated such service opportunities. According to theTravel Industry Association of America , more than 55 million Americans have participated in a volunteer vacation, and about 100 million more are considering taking one. [cite web |url=http://www.ntaonline.com/index.php?change_well_id=2&url_article_id=3206&url_channel_id=15 |title= YIA Voice of the Traveler Survey Results|format=]Volunteer vacations participants are diverse but typically share a desire to “do something good” while also experiencing new places and challenges in locales they might not otherwise visit.Fact|date=October 2007
While some experts on volunteerism welcome the expansion of volunteer vacations as an opportunity to provide more resources to projects and to encourage a volunteer ethic in people,Fact|date=October 2007 others have pointed out that the business methods used by tour operators, such as exclusivity deals, and catering to the needs of the volunteer rather than the volunteer project, exploit the communities the projects are intended to help. [cite web |url= http://www.worldvolunteerweb.org/join-the-network/blogs/doc/gap-year-voluntourists-told-not.html|title= "Voluntourists" Told Not To Bother|author=Alex Klaushofer |date=August 16,2007 |publisher=U.N. World Volunteer Web]
There are also other types of traveling that engage people with scientific research and education to promote the understanding and action necessary for a sustainable environment. Participants cover a fee that would include expenses on the different sites worldwide, and engage in projects according to their interest or location.
ee also
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ecotourism
*travel References
Further Reading
* [http://www.nokaoimagazine.com/Features/v.11n.2/Getting_Good_and_Dirty.html "Getting Good and Dirty"] Article about volunteer vacations in
Hawaii . "Maui No Ka 'Oi Magazine " Vol.11 No.2 (March 2007).
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