International conservation 'volunteering' and the geographies of global environmental citizenship

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72 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Growing numbers of fee-paying 'volunteers' leave the UK each year to work on international nature conservation projects. Powerful advocates argue that such volunteering offers active global environmental citizens the opportunity to make a difference, delivering public services through a politically and economically appealing model of social enterprise This paper reviews the geographies of citizenship performed in international conservation volunteering from the UK to critically examine these claims. It draws on and develops three conceptual approaches from political geography. First, it examines international conservation volunteering as a mode of cosmopolitan global environmental citizenship, guided by the universal framework of natural science across a flat earth of difference making opportunities Second, it reviews the material reality of conservation volunteering as an illustration of the neoliberal and neo-colonial tendencies within mainstream global environmentalism Third, it moves beyond these familiar theoretical tropes to present a more-than-human account of international conservation volunteering from the UK. This attends to the material assemblages of human and nonhuman bodies, practices and affects caught up in within these expressions of citizenship In conclusion the paper critically compares the different materialisations of citizenship offered by these approaches. It finds that the geographies of citizenship performed within the sector are neither 'global' or 'environmental', nor do they comprise modes of citizenship that embody planetary humanism or panoptic rationalism Instead, the modes, subjects and spatialities of citizenship performed here are asymmetric, affective and more-than-human This has important implications for the scope, practices and future of international environmental politics and for the emerging sub-discipline of the geographies of citizenship. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)311 - 322
Number of pages12
JournalPOLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
Volume29
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2010

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