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NGO Transnational to Grassroots

I chose Macalester because I was interested in fighting social injustice through development, and Macalester, with its urban setting, offered the opportunity for serious engagement with communities beyond the college. Taking Development Politics with Professor David Blaney forced me to tussle with the mixed history of development. I was shocked to learn that “development” started not as a social justice project, but with the aim of poverty alleviation linked to institutions such as the World Bank and USAID. That certainly was not my idea of development; the class left me creatively confused and sparked an interest in how we think about development and poverty.

Every opportunity
built upon the last
experience.
—Trudy Rebert

The next summer, Professor Blaney and I wrote a case study to be used in a class the following spring to look at ways of defining poverty and to develop quantitative thinking skills. While I wrestled with theories in the classroom and through research, Macalester’s extracurricular circles allowed me to hold my questions up to practice. I worked with organizations addressing campaign reform, fair trade and with Minnesota Public Interest Research Group (MPIRG) on women’s rights. First as a volunteer, and then through Macalester’s program that pairs work-study students with local nonprofits, I worked at Youth- CARE, a youth-focused nonprofit in Minneapolis, in their young women’s program and developing new research for their grants.

Last spring I was able to study abroad in India to re-question international development, community organizing and theory. I lived with a host family and attended classes in Jaipur, where I learned to cross the road between camel-drawn carts, cycle rickshaws, cars, buses and the occasional elephant. I also interned with an NGO (nongovernmental organization) that developed women’s self-help groups and organized in rural areas around health and poverty issues and female feticide. Moving through different socioeconomic, caste and religious groups as a foreigner and exploring development in the Indian context equipped me with a new comparative perspective.

In the future, I hope to work in development, both at the grassroots and at the transnational policy levels to help redefine development, not only as something done in faraway nations but also as a process that requires economic, political and cultural changes in the U.S. and other core nations. As I have built on my classroom knowledge, my research and first-hand experience, Macalester has enabled me to critically engage ideas about development in the classroom, test them and develop new ones through work in the real world.

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