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E-raamat: International Service Learning: Engaging Host Communities

Edited by (University of Western Ontario, Canada)
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International service learning (ISL) programs are growing more popular with students looking to advance their skills and knowledge to become global citizens. While the benefits of these programs among students are well documented, little is known about the implications they have on host communities themselves. This volume explores the impact of ISL programs on members of host communities (e.g. host families and local partner NGOs) who are increasingly influenced by the presence of international students in their lives. Drawing upon post-colonial, feminist and other critical and decolonizing theories, it examines the complicated power relations between North American ISL students and host communities in East and West Africa, the Caribbean and Central America. It stresses the importance of developing trusting relations between ISL students, faculty and individuals in the host communities to create mutually engaging learning experiences.

List of Figures and Tables
xi
Acknowledgements xiii
PART I Overview
1 International Service Learning: Engaging Host Communities---Introduction
3(16)
Marianne A. Larsen
2 Epistemological, Methodological, and Theoretical Challenges of Carrying Out ISL Research Involving Host Communities: A Conversation
19(16)
Allyson Larkin
Marianne A. Larsen
Katie Macdonald
Harry Smaller
PART II Case Studies: Impact of ISL on Host Communities
3 Saying It Doesn't Make It So: Do We Listen and Act When the Host Community Tells Us What They Want?
35(14)
Nora Pillard Reynolds
Junior Cezar Gasparini
4 Solidarity or Neo-Colonialism? The Challenges of Understanding the Impact of ISL on Nicaraguan Host Communities
49(16)
Michael O'Sullivan
Harry Smaller
5 The Economic Circle: Impacts of Volunteerism and Service Learning on Three Rural Communities in Costa Rica
65(15)
Cynthia Toms Smedley
6 Southern Perspectives on ISL Volunteers: Reframing the Neo-Colonial Encounter
80(14)
Barbara Heron
7 International Service Learning in a Tanzanian Host Community: Post-Colonial Insights
94(14)
Marianne A. Larsen
8 In the Right Relationship: A Case Study of International Service Learning in Eastern Africa
108(11)
Jessica Arends
9 Orient(aliz)ation: A Case Study of North American International Education Programs at the University of Ghana
119(12)
Shelane Jorgenson
10 Struggles for Mutuality: Conceptualizing Hosts as Participants in International Service Learning in Ghana
131(16)
Katie Macdonald
Jessica Vorstermans
PART III Rethinking and Re-Imagining ISL and Host Community Relations
11 Reflections From a Nicaraguan Career ISL Program Coordinator: Challenges and Guidelines for Moving Forward
147(15)
Joselin Hernandez
12 Many Meanings: Moving Reciprocity Towards Interdependence
162(13)
Samantha Dear
Ryan Howard
13 Resipwosite as a Guiding Framework for Rethinking Mutual Exchange in Global Service Learning Partnerships: Findings From a Case Study of the Haiti Compact
175(14)
Jessica Murphy
14 A Cross-Cultural Conversation About International Service Learning in Ghana
189(12)
Godwin Agudey
Hannah Deloughery
15 The Potential of ISL: Re-Examining Ethical Engagement Amongst ISL Partners
201(14)
Tamara Baldwin
Salim Mohamed
Juliet Tembe
16 Fair Trade Learning: A Framework for Ethical Global Partnerships
215(20)
Eric Hartman
17 Mi Casa Es Tu Casa: A Framework for Reciprocal Public Benefit
235(17)
Gonzalo Duarte
18 I Am Because We Are: Rethinking Service Learning and the Possibility of Learning From Ubuntu
252(11)
Allyson Larkin
19 Conclusion: ISL and Host Communities---Relationships and Responsibility
263(14)
Jennifer Kozak
Marianne A. Larsen
Contributors 277(4)
Index 281
Marianne A. Larsen is Professor of Comparative and International Education at The University of Western Ontario, CA.