International Voluntourism as Secular Pilgrimage: A Case Study of Hosts and Guests in a Small Panamanian Town

In this paper, I discuss the social dynamics of international ‘voluntourism’ in Santa Catalina, a small town on the Pacific coast of Panama that has become a tourist mecca in the last two decades. Through my collection of documentary, interview, and ethnographic data, I contribute to on-going debate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laura Edles
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Technological University Dublin 2015-01-01
Series:International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arrow.tudublin.ie/ijrtp/vol3/iss2/5
_version_ 1828889173912715264
author Laura Edles
author_facet Laura Edles
author_sort Laura Edles
collection DOAJ
description In this paper, I discuss the social dynamics of international ‘voluntourism’ in Santa Catalina, a small town on the Pacific coast of Panama that has become a tourist mecca in the last two decades. Through my collection of documentary, interview, and ethnographic data, I contribute to on-going debates about the appropriateness and impact of volunteer tourism in developing countries (McGehee 2009, 2012; Palacios 2010; Tomazos and Butler 2012). While existing research tends to focus on the volunteers, here I focus on the complex relations between the volunteers and the ‘voluntoured’ (local Panamanians). My preliminary research shows significant parallels between secular international volunteers and short-term missionaries (often disparaged as partaking in ‘Christian tourism’ rather than genuine religious service). Specifically, both types of volunteers tend to exude a similar missionary zeal and the dual goal of enriching (or even ‘transforming’) their own lives while ‘helping others;’ both envision themselves as embarking on sacred journeys (Cohen 1979; Graburn 1989). In addition to empirically addressing questions about privilege and power, and whether (or how) international volunteering inadvertently perpetuates global inequalities, this research illuminates the difficulties in negotiating respect across unequal social positions and in interactions between seemingly agnostic local hosts and foreign guests on sacred journeys.
first_indexed 2024-12-13T12:35:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-bb0df3e8a0ea471aa6a05a0319669bc7
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2009-7379
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-13T12:35:58Z
publishDate 2015-01-01
publisher Technological University Dublin
record_format Article
series International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage
spelling doaj.art-bb0df3e8a0ea471aa6a05a0319669bc72022-12-21T23:45:51ZengTechnological University DublinInternational Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage2009-73792015-01-0132rg/10.21427/D7C42RInternational Voluntourism as Secular Pilgrimage: A Case Study of Hosts and Guests in a Small Panamanian TownLaura Edles0California State University, NorthridgeIn this paper, I discuss the social dynamics of international ‘voluntourism’ in Santa Catalina, a small town on the Pacific coast of Panama that has become a tourist mecca in the last two decades. Through my collection of documentary, interview, and ethnographic data, I contribute to on-going debates about the appropriateness and impact of volunteer tourism in developing countries (McGehee 2009, 2012; Palacios 2010; Tomazos and Butler 2012). While existing research tends to focus on the volunteers, here I focus on the complex relations between the volunteers and the ‘voluntoured’ (local Panamanians). My preliminary research shows significant parallels between secular international volunteers and short-term missionaries (often disparaged as partaking in ‘Christian tourism’ rather than genuine religious service). Specifically, both types of volunteers tend to exude a similar missionary zeal and the dual goal of enriching (or even ‘transforming’) their own lives while ‘helping others;’ both envision themselves as embarking on sacred journeys (Cohen 1979; Graburn 1989). In addition to empirically addressing questions about privilege and power, and whether (or how) international volunteering inadvertently perpetuates global inequalities, this research illuminates the difficulties in negotiating respect across unequal social positions and in interactions between seemingly agnostic local hosts and foreign guests on sacred journeys.https://arrow.tudublin.ie/ijrtp/vol3/iss2/5Tourism impactsPanamaVoluntourism
spellingShingle Laura Edles
International Voluntourism as Secular Pilgrimage: A Case Study of Hosts and Guests in a Small Panamanian Town
International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage
Tourism impacts
Panama
Voluntourism
title International Voluntourism as Secular Pilgrimage: A Case Study of Hosts and Guests in a Small Panamanian Town
title_full International Voluntourism as Secular Pilgrimage: A Case Study of Hosts and Guests in a Small Panamanian Town
title_fullStr International Voluntourism as Secular Pilgrimage: A Case Study of Hosts and Guests in a Small Panamanian Town
title_full_unstemmed International Voluntourism as Secular Pilgrimage: A Case Study of Hosts and Guests in a Small Panamanian Town
title_short International Voluntourism as Secular Pilgrimage: A Case Study of Hosts and Guests in a Small Panamanian Town
title_sort international voluntourism as secular pilgrimage a case study of hosts and guests in a small panamanian town
topic Tourism impacts
Panama
Voluntourism
url https://arrow.tudublin.ie/ijrtp/vol3/iss2/5
work_keys_str_mv AT lauraedles internationalvoluntourismassecularpilgrimageacasestudyofhostsandguestsinasmallpanamaniantown