Josefa’s husband died of dengue fever three years ago, just weeks after the birth of his fourth daughter. Today, it is a struggle for Josefa to independently provide her children with adequate shelter, nutritious food, clean water, and clothing. Her only sources of income are her in-home laundry business and her small garden. Recently, upon a yearly check-up of her children, Josefa was told that her 3 year-old and 4½ year-old daughters are showing early effects of malnutrition. Her eldest daughter’s (9 years old) vision problem is also worsening. As Josefa was leaving the health clinic, a foreigner handed her a shiny pamphlet and told her about a new initiative in her neighbourhood. The initiative is sponsored by the Canadian “Education for our Daughters” NGO and her municipal government. The initiative aims to build a local school for girls in order to improve the quality of life through education.
What might Josefa’s reaction to this project be?
Discussion Summary
- Need to watch out for the assumption that foreigners have more knowledge than residents.
- Is there any community consultation taking place to determine the needs of the community? How is the consultation taking place?
- Josefa was approached at a vulnerable time. It is important to consider how this will affect the situation and the ethics of the project.
- Do the community needs differ from NGO objectives? Is the community divided over project?
- Are partnerships productive? How are partnerships formed and how does that affect ethics?
- The initiative is situated in Josefa’s community, and is partially sponsored by her local government. Why is a foreigner informing her about the program?
- A school may not be the most paramount need, is it something that is important to Josefa and her family?
- It is necessary to be aware of our own assumptions that this project is ill-planned and directed by the foreign organization. Perhaps the initiative is good and Josefa’s family’s situation is rare within the community. It is possible that most of the village would benefit from the project. The foreigner’s presence is not necessarily a bad thing. Maybe the foreigner adds visibility to a good initiative, a symbol of hope, etc.
- Community-based initiatives have more potential for reduced ethical dilemmas. It is better to have ethical problems surface from within a community than from without because a local framework exists to deal with the dilemmas.
- There is an assumption that education will improve quality of life in that community, but will it? Think about the type of education. Is education always good? What if this a for example a catholic school, and the community is not catholic.
- The underlying question is “how do we come up with these projects?” What is the process? UBC as a diverse campus but the diversity is not utilized to its fullest potential. UBC students from South Africa, for example, have not been approached to act as consultants for students who are going to South Africa.
- As a UBC student it is important to take note that it is difficult to answer all of the questions listed above. Each community is so nuanced that there are always special cases, it is important to dig for the back story.
