This paper is an exploratory study of moral anthropology focused on the
local practices of global non-governmental organizations. For more than
10 years, Ruili Women and Children Development Center (the Center) in
the southwest border region of China has developed itself into a
non-governmental organization that adopts transnational humanitarianism
and fosters a spirit of grassroots volunteer dedication. In this paper,
two anthropologists’ analytic framework of morality will be examined and
my own views on morality/ethics will be discussed in three aspects:
morality as norms, morality as doing good, and ethics as affect. The
Center came into existence in response to the decline and uncertainty of
local morality (morality as norms). Under such conditions, the Center
allies itself with transnational humanitarianism to provide much-needed
medical care for the sick in the region (morality as doing good). In the
process, the Center, mainly consisting of female members, has created a
“life-environment” that is in tune with global humanitarianism and an
army of devoted volunteers, especially among local HIV-infected women,
who have found “joie” in life itself (ethics as affect). This
study hopes to broaden our theoretical and experiential understanding of
non-governmental organizations, and of how to improve quality of life
in times of social change.
Hongxin Fang
. Non-governmental organization global, volunteerism local: An exploration of moral anthropology[J]. Chinese journal of sociology, 2022
, 8(1)
: 129
-162
.
DOI: 10.1177/2057150X211072464