The following are suggestions for NGOs in developing countries
interested in gaining access to foreign volunteers. This is a
"getting started" guide, NOT a comprehensive guide: it's impossible
within the boundaries of a simple web page to detail all an
organization needs to do to host volunteers from other countries.
- Make sure it is legal to host foreign volunteers
Check with your national government and make sure that it is legal
for foreigners to come to your country to volunteer, or that it's
legal for foreign tourists to volunteer while they are on a
tourist visa. Get the exact wording of the legal statue that
allows this and post it on your web site to show potential
volunteers you have researched and confirmed this. For instance,
in most cases, volunteering
by foreigners in Indonesia is illegal. Your web site needs
to prove that foreign volunteers are legallyallowed in your
country.
- Involve local volunteers & show that involvement
Your NGO should not try to recruit foreign volunteers if it does
not already involve LOCAL volunteers. How can you ask people from
other countries to volunteer for you if local people themselves
aren't involved and invested in your work as volunteers? Involving
local volunteers shows that local people endorse your organization
and its work.
- Affiliation with international non-governmental
organizations (INGOs)
Your organization needs to be recognized, at least informally, by
local offices in developing countries of organizations such as the
United Nations Development Programme,
OneWorld, Save
the Children, Oxfam, World
Vision, MercyCorps,
Doctors Without
Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). If you are an
organization serving wildlife, what affiliations do you have with
international accrediting bodies that show what you do with
wildlife is ethical and not exploitative? Such recognition takes
much more than one meeting: it means that the staff at the local
office is familiar with your organization's work because you have
regularly updated the office about such, that a representative
from the local office visits your organization periodically, and
that the staff at the local office knows enough about your
organization to be able to provide a reference for it back to the
main office. You need these local INGOs affiliates to be in a
position to verify your organization's credibility to others.
- Collaboration with other local NGOs
In addition to affiliating with INGOs, local organizations should
be in a position to verify your organization's credibility to
others. That means that, like international groups, staff at local
NGOs should be familiar with your organization's work because you
have regularly updated them about such, that they visit your
organization periodically, and that they know enough about your
organization to be able to provide a reference for it to other
organizations. If you have engaged together with another NGO in a
project, all the better!
- Membership in formal networks and associations
If your country or region has a network or association of NGOs,
you should be a member. You can find these by contacting other
local organizations to find out if such exists, or searching on
the Internet for such.
- Excellent online profile
If you type your organization's name into google,
what happens? Does your organization's web site come up (if you
have such)? What about an online document by an INGO that
references your organization? Or a newspaper article highlighting
your organization's good work? Anything negative? An online
profile adds to your organization's credibility.
- A clear, complete, easy-to-use web site
It's not essential that your organization have a web site
in order to host international volunteers. But if your
organization does have a web site, it should:
- not have advertising for other companies and businesses (no
banner ads, no google ads!)
- be free of misspellings
- well-designed, without lots of cumbersome graphics
complete, with a listing of your staff, your board of
directors, your organization's address, contact information,
and at least a summary of your organization's budget.
- Academic profile
It's not essential, but it will certainly add greatly to your
organization's credibility if it has been referred to in a
university-related paper. Of course, it's not always possible to
say yes to participation in an academic research project, given
your other priorities. But your organization should try to,
whenever possible and when asked, to participate, as such will add
to the appearance of your organization as transparent and credible
to anyone investigating your organization for such.
- Have official papers in order
You need to have copies of your organization's official government
documentation/registration papers (if you are, indeed, officially
registered), brochures, press releases, staff list and financial
statements ready for review by other organizations -- or even by
potential international volunteers. Volunteer-placement
organizations will consider how quickly and completely you respond
to their request for such, so get them in order and ready-to-share
before you start meeting with such organizations. If you don't
have any of this -- if you are a tiny grassroots-based
organization that has not registered with your government and has
no paperwork whatsoever, then you will have to formally partner
with an organization that does have such, who can take formal
legal responsibility for the international volunteer(s).
- Draft documents associated with your planned involvement of
onsite volunteers
This step is essential if you are going to involve onsite
foreign volunteers -- there's no substitute for it. Your
organization needs to draft documents that detail the following,
which you will eventually share and discuss with organizations
that place international volunteers (it is very important that
this information be in writing, even if it's all still being
negotiated!):
- the location(s) of the volunteering assignment(s) -- city
or cities, neighborhoods, and exact addresses whenever
possible.
- the tasks volunteers will be expected to complete: working
directly with at-risk children doing what? working directly
with farmers doing what? will they do these tasks alone or in
a group? will they ever be alone with a child or adult, even
another volunteer, or always with multiple people and local
staff in the room?
- the resources that will be available to volunteers
(translators? a desk? a car? a bicycle?)
- the time frame for the volunteer to provide his or her
service (what months and for how many months?).
- a description of why the service of this foreign volunteer
is needed, instead of a local person
- how, after the volunteer departs, his or her work will be
sustained or built-upon
- detailed information about the volunteers' work
environment. Will the volunteer have daily access to a phone?
computer access? Will the volunteer need to have a security
escort when traveling from housing to the volunteer
assignment, or in any other situations, and, if so, who is
going to provide this security escort? Will the volunteer ever
be expected to be alone with a client or a child?
- detailed information on to whom the volunteer will report
to at your organization, who at your organization will
supervise the volunteer's work, who at your organization will
provide support to the volunteer as needed, what staff members
at your organization will work with the volunteer and how, how
the volunteer will be expected to interact with local people,
etc.
- information regarding translators. Will a translator
accompany volunteers during his or her work? What percentage
of the people the volunteer will work with speak English? Will
your organization provide a translator?
- detailed information about where your organization will
house international volunteers, if the placement organization
cannot provide housing (more and more placement organizations
are requiring local hosting organizations to provide housing).
Your organization must provide more than just a statement that
your organization will house such volunteers; it needs to note
where, and what the conditions will be -- Will it be with a
family and, if so, what are their names? Will each volunteer
have his or her own room? Will there be locks on the windows
and doors? Will it be within walking distance of the
volunteering assignment?
- detailed information on how your organization will support
the volunteer during arrival and departure into the country.
Will there be someone at the airport from your organization to
help the volunteer through the entry process? Will your
organization provide transport from the airport to its
location? Will your organization provide transportation
assistance and help with customs and other officials when the
volunteer leaves the country?
- detailed information about the nearest health care
facilities (individual doctor, clinic and hospital), and how
your organization will or will not help to get a volunteer to
such if needed, and explicit information on how the health
care facility must be paid (in cash by the volunteer?).
- detailed information about to whom the volunteer should
complain regarding any issue - a name, an email address and a
phone number.
- detailed lists of what costs your organization cannot
pay for (airfare, housing, bedding, food, transportation,
security, insurance for the volunteer, etc.). Remember that
most international placement organizations will expect your
organization to bear at least some costs!
- a draft evacuation plan for volunteers, in case of
natural disaster or a man-made crisis, or, clarification that
the volunteer placement organization is in charge of such.
What assistance will your organization guarantee in the event
of a flood, a hurricane, a tsunami, a mass fire, a military
coup, a raid by a militant group, etc., and what assistance
will your organization NOT guarantee?
If you do not have all of the above in place now, expect to take at
least several months to do so. Without the above, no
volunteer-placement organization will want to partner with your
organization, and it's doubtful any sensible foreigner with credible
skills and character will want to come onsite and volunteer at your
organization.
No voluntourism!
Voluntourism is an insult for a program where people, usually of
white European descent, from "Western" or "rich" countries, pay a
fee to a volunteer hosting agency and to go to another country for a
week or two:
-
To do something that either is entirely unnecessary, even
harmful or exploitative to animals (wildlife "rescues") or local
people (helping "orphans"), or that local people would be
preferred to be paid to do themselves (building a school,
digging a well, etc.).
-
AND/OR with little or not vetting of volunteers - as long as
the volunteer can pay, the volunteer can go, and in some cases,
even bring the kids! No request for any specialized skills or
experience.
-
AND/OR is via a program that talks a lot about how much fun the
"volunteers" will have, a program that has a web site with lots
of photos of the foreign "volunteers" interacting with wildlife
(which, of course, is completely inappropriate and dangerous for
the animals), but little or no information about why local
people like this program, while they feel it is appropriate, how
they lead all decision making for these local efforts, etc.
HOWEVER, if a program charges foreign volunteers to participate
BUT:
-
Does NOT take absolutely anyone and everyone that can pay to go
- volunteers must have certain areas of expertise and must be
vetted for such and they will be turned away unless they have
the expertise needed, pass a criminal background check, etc.
-
Has a web site that talks about how local people are directing
the assignments and leading the foreign volunteers regarding
tasks
-
Can clearly show how foreign volunteers will be doing something
local people are unable to do themselves, BUT, how the
volunteers will be working alongside local people to build up
their skills
Then it's usually not easily classified as voluntourism.
Take a hard look at your program and make sure there are no
qualities, including statements on the web site, that could make
someone say, "That's just voluntourism."
Refunds for payment
Also consider making a statement, in writing, that says your
organization understands that volunteers are free to leave the
program at any time, and what your refund policy is regarding funds
that you charged onsite volunteers. If there is no refund policy,
say so in multiple places (on your web site, on the document you
have the volunteer signs, on the web page a person sees before they
pay, etc.) but also make it clear that the volunteer is under no
obligation to stay at the organization. Emphasize that you hope they
will stay for four weeks or three months or whatever the amount of
time it is you want the volunteer for, but remember, they are volunteers-
and, in many cases, paying customers - and you have no right to
imply that they must stay at a work site for ANY reason.
Note: some countries, such as the UK, assert that creating
a written agreement with a volunteer that says the volunteer
agrees to stay for a certain amount of time is an employment
contract, and this could allow the volunteer to sue for
payment for services.
Also see my advice for people interested in vetting
organizations in other countries, and consider how your own
organization would measure up to the vetting steps offered.
In addition, read this resource for Creating
Group Volunteering Activities. It details just how much you
will need to do to prepare a site for group volunteering. It's an
expensive, time-consuming endeavor - are you ready?
If you would like to engage foreign volunteers online,
rather than onsite, in high-impact, meaningful activities that
benefit your organization, read through this list
of ideas for high-impact virtual volunteering roles and
activities. These high-impact assignments for remote
online volunteers are best done in partnership with a university or
professional association that will recruit and screen the online
volunteers for you, such as UCD
Dublin Volunteers Overseas or CECI
in Montreal. Use the aforementioned information on this page
to prepare for hosting online volunteers, adapting the
recommendations as appropriate. If you want to master all that
involving online volunteers entails, consider purchasing The
Last Virtual Volunteering Guidebook.
Partnerships for recruitment
Once you have all of the above in place, you are ready to approach
existing volunteer-placement organizations about hosting volunteers.
Begin by looking in your local geographic area for local
organizations already hosting such volunteers, and ask if they would
introduce you to a representative of the volunteers' sponsoring
organization, either face-to-face or via the phone. Such
organizations include (and please note that this is not a
comprehensive list):
Embassies for other countries can also help put you in contact
with volunteer-placement organizations.
Very short-term online volunteers can help your organization
with translation and research tasks, designing publications and web
sites, developing databases, and activities relating to marketing,
fund raising and business planning, and these tasks don't require
you to set up a partnership with any of the aforementioned. Here's
how to recruit for short-term online volunteering (virtual
volunteering) opportunities:
Note: charging online volunteers for their service TO your NGO is an
absolute no-no. You can encourage them to make a donation, you can
encourage them to let their friends know how to donate to your NGO,
but charging people to do remote volunteering FOR your organization is
unethical and, if I find out you are doing it, I absolutely will
condemn you very publicly online.
A resource that can help you evaluate volunteer-placement organizations
that charge you for your placement as a volunteer, as well as for people
interested in partnering or supporting an organization abroad but
wanting to know it's a credible organization, that it's not some sort of
scam, or an 'organization' of just one person.
, a guide I developed a decade ago
and regularly update until October 2015. Requesting NGOs have been based
primarily in Africa, Asia and parts of Eastern Europe.