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State-Managed International Voluntary Service: The Case of Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers

Editat de Yasunobu Okabe
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 sep 2024
This open access book addresses two issues of state-managed international voluntary service (SMIVS)—its contributions and advantages/disadvantages—by the case study of Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers (JOCV). Until now, the literature has given little attention to SMIVS and Asian international voluntary service (IVS). Proposing the concept of SMIVS, this is the first book in English to focus on JOCV and IVS managed by the Japanese government.
The book is organized into two parts. In Part I, the authors, including scholars, former volunteers, and practitioners, explore the contributions of JOCV to the development in host communities, personal and professional development of volunteers, and Japanese civil society. In Part II, the authors analyze how JOCV creates advantages such as multilevel support by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), a Japanese government aid agency, and disadvantages such as the weak expertise of volunteers. The authors’ theoretical approaches cover capacity development, social capital, gift theory, and institutional theory, and their methodologies include statistical analysis of survey data, interview-based anthropological interpretation, and single/comparative case study. This combination of multiple approaches and methodologies is a strong feature of the study reported here.
Thanks to state management, as the book demonstrates, JOCV can facilitate mutual benefits between volunteers and host communities, enhancing the human capital of the former and contributing to the socioeconomic development of the latter. It also shows that Japanese volunteers blend into host communities well, respecting and learning their social values and perspectives. This achievement is accomplished to the extent that collaborative and equal interpersonal relationships are nurtured between the volunteers and local people, including counterparts. Thus, this book helps to reduce inequality and stereotypes in IVS, with implications for other state-managed IVS.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789819736140
ISBN-10: 9819736145
Pagini: 215
Ilustrații: Approx. 215 p. 40 illus.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer Nature Singapore
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Singapore, Singapore

Cuprins

Foreword.- Introduction: JOCV as a State-managed international voluntary service.- Transitions in the 56 years of JOCV: Needs, service and cooperation.- Part I: Contributions of State-Managed International Voluntary Service.- JOCV’s contribution to capacity development: Insights from case studies.- The Water Security Action Team (W-SAT) in Africa.- Revisiting the JOCV post in Cameroon.- Hearts, Minds, and Sentiments: The Volunteers Program in the Immunization Program in Bangladesh and the Chagas Diseases Control Project of Honduras.- Shocked and angry volunteers.- Giving Back to Society by Former JOCV.- Sports and Development(tentative).- What Do Volunteers Receive? Interpreting the Reciprocal Feelings of JOCV through Gift Theory.- Part II: Advantages and Disadvantages of State-Managed International Voluntary Service.- Strengths and Weaknesses of the State-Managed International Voluntary Services: The Case of JOCV.- The Long Journey of Development Cooperation across Four Continents.- Country Office as Part of the JICA Volunteer Program: Background and Its Implementation in Bhutan.- Winter Camp for Highland Schoolchildren in Bhutan.- International Volunteering under the Spread of the Covid-19: Insights from Evacuated JOCV.- Roles of JOCVs in School Health Education Program in Ghana: From the Perspective of Host Organizations.- Japanese volunteers in the Philippines: A story of friendship and human connection.- From my experience of working with JOCV in Cameroon.- Delegation of Agriculture and Rural Development of Bangangte, Cameroon.- Part III: Conclusions.- Breaking the iron cage: Understanding legitimacy claims for international development volunteering.- Conclusions.

Notă biografică

Yasunobu Okabe is Professor at the Graduate School of Law, Tohoku University, Japan. He is also Visiting Fellow at the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) Ogata Research Institute. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Tokyo. From 2010 to 2015, he served as Senior Research Fellow at the JICA Ogata Research Institute. Currently, he is undertaking research on international volunteering and Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers from a comparative and historical perspective. He published various articles and books on Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers in English and Japanese such as “Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers: Its Genesis and Development” In Hiroshi Kato et al., eds., Japan’s Development Assistance: Foreign Aid and the Post-2015 Agenda (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016); “What Motivates Japan’s International Volunteers? Categorizing Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers (JOCVs).” VOLUNTAS: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations (2019) 30(5) (co-authored with Sakiko Shiratori and Kazuya Suda). The book he served as editor of, Achievements of Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers: Working for Development Cooperation and Fostering Globally Competent Human Resources for 50 Years [2018, in Japanese], won the special award of the Japan Society for International Development in 2019.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

This open access book addresses two issues of state-managed international voluntary service (SMIVS)—its contributions and advantages/disadvantages—by the case study of Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers (JOCV). Until now, the literature has given little attention to SMIVS and Asian international voluntary service (IVS). Proposing the concept of SMIVS, this is the first book in English to focus on JOCV and IVS managed by the Japanese government.
The book is organized into two parts. In Part I, the authors, including scholars, former volunteers, and practitioners, explore the contributions of JOCV to the development in host communities, personal and professional development of volunteers, and Japanese civil society. In Part II, the authors analyze how JOCV creates advantages such as multilevel support by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), a Japanese government aid agency, and disadvantages such as the weak expertise of volunteers. The authors’ theoretical approaches cover capacity development, social capital, gift theory, and institutional theory, and their methodologies include statistical analysis of survey data, interview-based anthropological interpretation, and single/comparative case study. This combination of multiple approaches and methodologies is a strong feature of the study reported here.
Thanks to state management, as the book demonstrates, JOCV can facilitate mutual benefits between volunteers and host communities, enhancing the human capital of the former and contributing to the socioeconomic development of the latter. It also shows that Japanese volunteers blend into host communities well, respecting and learning their social values and perspectives. This achievement is accomplished to the extent that collaborative and equal interpersonal relationships are nurtured between the volunteers and local people, including counterparts. Thus, this book helps to reduce inequality and stereotypes in IVS, with implications for other state-managed IVS.

Caracteristici

This book is open access, which means that you have free and unlimited access First book on JOCV, the first international voluntary service in Asia Explains mutuality of benefits between volunteers and host communities is possible in JOCV Redresses inequality and stereotype in international volunteering for development