ActionAid is Overhauling Its Child Sponsorship Model Amid Criticism of Racial Bias.
The charity is seeking to decolonize its work by transforming the way it funds aid projects in developing countries. The new leadership, Taahra Ghazi and Hannah Bond, has vowed to shift narratives around aid from sympathy towards solidarity and partnership with global movements.
Critics argue that the current child sponsorship model perpetuates racist attitudes, with donors selecting a picture of a brown or black child and choosing their country of origin - effectively creating a transactional relationship. The model, which ActionAid was founded on in 1972, has been likened to "poverty porn" that reinforces paternalistic views.
The charity's supporters sponsor children in 30 countries, with the money providing 34% of its global funds. But the new leadership wants to change this by evolving the model to be shaped by community voices and respond to their realities today.
"We recognize that the current child sponsorship model reflects a different time," Ghazi said. "We're in the process, until 2028, of transformation that includes our systems, what money we give, how we procure services - we're decolonising it."
ActionAid aims to provide long-term funding to grassroots groups and empower those on the ground to make decisions about their own projects. The charity also plans to launch a fund specifically for women's rights groups that are under attack due to the global anti-rights movement.
The new leadership wants ActionAid to become a feminist, anti-racist organization that focuses on partnerships with civil society groups rather than individual donors.
"ActionAid's future is about solidarity, justice and how we can really drive forward change," Bond said.
However, some critics argue that the practice of marketing African children to a western audience should be abandoned altogether. "The entire concept is highly problematic and racist in its overtones... Nothing should replace it."
Instead, experts recommend focusing on providing better education, state welfare systems, and healthcare as fundamental responsibilities of nation-states.
The charity is seeking to decolonize its work by transforming the way it funds aid projects in developing countries. The new leadership, Taahra Ghazi and Hannah Bond, has vowed to shift narratives around aid from sympathy towards solidarity and partnership with global movements.
Critics argue that the current child sponsorship model perpetuates racist attitudes, with donors selecting a picture of a brown or black child and choosing their country of origin - effectively creating a transactional relationship. The model, which ActionAid was founded on in 1972, has been likened to "poverty porn" that reinforces paternalistic views.
The charity's supporters sponsor children in 30 countries, with the money providing 34% of its global funds. But the new leadership wants to change this by evolving the model to be shaped by community voices and respond to their realities today.
"We recognize that the current child sponsorship model reflects a different time," Ghazi said. "We're in the process, until 2028, of transformation that includes our systems, what money we give, how we procure services - we're decolonising it."
ActionAid aims to provide long-term funding to grassroots groups and empower those on the ground to make decisions about their own projects. The charity also plans to launch a fund specifically for women's rights groups that are under attack due to the global anti-rights movement.
The new leadership wants ActionAid to become a feminist, anti-racist organization that focuses on partnerships with civil society groups rather than individual donors.
"ActionAid's future is about solidarity, justice and how we can really drive forward change," Bond said.
However, some critics argue that the practice of marketing African children to a western audience should be abandoned altogether. "The entire concept is highly problematic and racist in its overtones... Nothing should replace it."
Instead, experts recommend focusing on providing better education, state welfare systems, and healthcare as fundamental responsibilities of nation-states.