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Wikipedia

Peace Corps

The Peace Corps is an independent agency and program of the United States government that trains and deploys volunteers to provide international development assistance. It was established in March 1961 by an executive order of President John F. Kennedy[note 1] and authorized by Congress the following September by the Peace Corps Act.[2]

Peace Corps
Agency overview
FormedMarch 1, 1961 (1961-03-01)
JurisdictionUnited States Government
HeadquartersWashington, D.C.
Annual budgetUS$410.5 million
(FY 2020)[1]
Agency executives
  • Carol Spahn, Director
  • Thomas Peng, Chief Executive Officer
  • Lauren Stephens, Chief of Staff
Websitepeacecorps.gov

The official goal of the Peace Corps is to assist developing countries by providing skilled workers in fields such as education, health, entrepreneurship, women's empowerment, and community development. Volunteers are American citizens, typically with a college degree, who are assigned to specific projects in certain countries based on their qualifications and experience; they often work with other stakeholders, governments, schools, non-profit organizations, non-governmental organizations, and entrepreneurs.[3] Following three months of technical training, Peace Corps members are expected to serve at least two years in the host country, after which they may request an extension of service.[4] Volunteers are strongly encouraged to respect local customs, learn the prevailing language, and live in comparable conditions.[3][5]

In its inaugural year, the Peace Corps had 900 volunteers serving 16 countries, reaching its peak in 1966 with 15,556 volunteers in 52 countries. Following budget cuts in 1989, the number of volunteers declined to 5,100, though subsequent increases in funding led to renewed growth into the 21st century; by its 50th anniversary in 2011, there were over 8,500 volunteers serving in 77 countries. Since its inception, more than 240,000 Americans have joined the Peace Corps and served in 142 countries.[6]

History

1950–1959

 
John F. Kennedy greets volunteers on August 28, 1961

In 1950, Walter Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers, proposed, in an article titled, "A Proposal for a Total Peace Offensive," that the United States establish a voluntary agency for young Americans to be sent around the world to fulfill humanitarian and development objectives.[7] Subsequently, throughout the 1950s, Reuther gave speeches to the following effect:

I have been saying for a long time that I believe the more young Americans who are trained to join with other young people in the world to be sent abroad with slide rule, textbook, and medical kit to help people help themselves with the tools of peace, the fewer young people will need to be sent with guns and weapons of war.[8][9]

In addition, following the end of World War II, various members of the United States Congress proposed bills to establish volunteer organizations in developing countries. In December 1951, Representative John F. Kennedy (D-Massachusetts) suggested to a group that "young college graduates would find a full life in bringing technical advice and assistance to the underprivileged and backward Middle East ... In that calling, these men would follow the constructive work done by the religious missionaries in these countries over the past 100 years."[10]: 337–338  In 1952 Senator Brien McMahon (D-Connecticut) proposed an "army" of young Americans to act as "missionaries of democracy".[11] Privately funded nonreligious organizations began sending volunteers overseas during the 1950s. While Kennedy is credited with the creation of the Peace Corps as president, the first initiative came from Senator Hubert H. Humphrey, Jr. (D-Minnesota), who introduced the first bill to create the Peace Corps in 1957—three years before Kennedy, as a presidential candidate, would raise the idea during a campaign speech at the University of Michigan. In his autobiography The Education of a Public Man, Humphrey wrote,

There were three bills of particular emotional importance to me: the Peace Corps, a disarmament agency, and the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. The President, knowing how I felt, asked me to introduce legislation for all three. I introduced the first Peace Corps bill in 1957. It did not meet with much enthusiasm. Some traditional diplomats quaked at the thought of thousands of young Americans scattered across their world. Many senators, including liberal ones, thought it silly and an unworkable idea. Now, with a young president urging its passage, it became possible and we pushed it rapidly through the Senate. It is fashionable now to suggest that Peace Corps Volunteers gained as much or more, from their experience as the countries they worked. That may be true, but it ought not demean their work. They touched many lives and made them better.[12]

 
The former Peace Corps headquarters at 1111 20th Street, NW in downtown Washington, D.C.

Only in 1959, however, did the idea receive serious attention in Washington when Congressman Henry S. Reuss of Wisconsin proposed a "Point Four Youth Corps". In 1960, he and Senator Richard L. Neuberger of Oregon introduced identical measures calling for a nongovernmental study of the idea's "advisability and practicability". Both the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee endorsed the study, the latter writing the Reuss proposal into the pending Mutual Security legislation. In this form it became law in June 1960. In August the Mutual Security Appropriations Act was enacted, making available US$10,000 for the study, and in November ICA contracted with Maurice Albertson, Andrew E. Rice, and Pauline E. Birky of Colorado State University Research Foundation[13] for the study.[14][15]

1960–1969

In August 1960, following the 1960 Democratic National Convention, Walter Reuther visited John F. Kennedy at the Kennedy compound in Hyannisport to discuss Kennedy's platform and staffing of a future administration.[16] It was there that Reuther got Kennedy to commit to creating the executive agency that would become the Peace Corps.[16] Under Reuther's leadership, the United Auto Workers had earlier that summer put together a policy platform that included a "youth peace corps" to be sent to developing nations.[17] Subsequently, at the urging of Reuther,[18] John F. Kennedy announced the idea for such an organization on October 14, 1960, at a late-night campaign speech at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on the steps of the Michigan Union.[19][20] He later dubbed the proposed organization the "Peace Corps." A brass marker commemorates the place where Kennedy stood. In the weeks after the 1960 election, the study group at Colorado State University released their feasibility a few days before Kennedy's Presidential Inauguration in January 1961.[21]

Critics opposed the program. Kennedy's opponent, Richard M. Nixon, predicted it would become a "cult of escapism" and "a haven for draft dodgers."[22][23][24]

Others doubted whether recent graduates had the necessary skills and maturity for such a task. The idea was popular among students, however, and Kennedy pursued it, asking respected academics such as Max Millikan and Chester Bowles to help him outline the organization and its goals. During his inaugural address, Kennedy again promised to create the program: "And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you—ask what you can do for your country".[25] President Kennedy in a speech at the White House on June 22, 1962, "Remarks to Student Volunteers Participating in Operation Crossroads Africa", acknowledged that Operation Crossroads for Africa was the basis for the development of the Peace Corps. "This group and this effort really were the progenitors of the Peace Corps and what this organization has been doing for a number of years led to the establishment of what I consider to be the most encouraging indication of the desire for service not only in this country but all around the world that we have seen in recent years".[26] The Peace Corps website answered the question "Who Inspired the Creation of the Peace Corps?", acknowledging that the Peace Corps were based on Operation Crossroads Africa founded by Rev. James H. Robinson.[27]

On March 1, 1961, Kennedy signed Executive Order 10924 that officially started the Peace Corps. Concerned with the growing tide of revolutionary sentiment in the Third World, Kennedy saw the Peace Corps as a means of countering the stereotype of the "Ugly American" and "Yankee imperialism," especially in the emerging nations of post-colonial Africa and Asia.[28][29] Kennedy appointed his brother-in-law, Sargent Shriver, to be the program's first director. Shriver fleshed out the organization and his think tank outlined the organization's goals and set the initial number of volunteers. The Peace Corps began recruiting in July 1962; Bob Hope recorded radio and television announcements hailing the program.

Until about 1967, applicants had to pass a placement test of "general aptitude" (knowledge of various skills needed for Peace Corps assignments) and language aptitude. [30][31] After an address from Kennedy, who was introduced by Rev. Russell Fuller of Memorial Christian Church, Disciples of Christ, on August 28, 1961, the first group of volunteers left for Ghana and Tanzania, known as Tanganyika at the time.[32] The program was formally authorized by Congress on September 22, 1961, and within two years over 7,300 volunteers were serving in 44 countries. This number increased to 15,000 in June 1966, the largest number in the organization's history.[33]

The organization experienced controversy in its first year of operation. On October 13, 1961, a postcard from a volunteer named Margery Jane Michelmore in Nigeria to a friend in the U.S. described her situation in Nigeria as "squalor and absolutely primitive living conditions."[34][35] However, this postcard never made it out of the country.[35] The University of Ibadan College Students Union demanded deportation and accused the volunteers of being "America's international spies" and the project as "a scheme designed to foster neocolonialism."[36] Soon the international press picked up the story, leading several people in the U.S. administration to question the program.[37] Nigerian students protested the program, while the American volunteers sequestered themselves and eventually began a hunger strike.[35] After several days, the Nigerian students agreed to open a dialogue with the Americans.

Policies

The theme of enabling Americans to volunteer in poor countries appealed to Kennedy because it fit in with his campaign themes of self-sacrifice and volunteerism, while also providing a way to redefine American relations with the Third World. Upon taking office, Kennedy issued an executive order establishing the Peace Corps. Shriver, not Kennedy, energetically lobbied Congress for approval. Kennedy proudly took the credit, and ensured that it remained free of CIA influence. He largely left its administration to Shriver. To avoid the appearance of favoritism to the Catholic Church, the Corps did not place its volunteers with any religious agencies.[38] In the first twenty-five years, more than 100,000 Americans served in 44 countries as part of the program. Most volunteers taught English in local schools, but many became involved in activities like construction and food delivery. Shriver practiced affirmative action, and women comprised about 40 percent of the first 7000 volunteers. However given the paucity of black college graduates, racial minorities never reached five percent. The Corps developed its own training program, based on nine weeks at an American university, with a focus on conversational language, world affairs, and desired job skills.[39] That was followed by three weeks at a Peace Corps camp in Puerto Rico, and week or two of orientation the home and the host country.[40] [41]

1970–1999

In July 1971, President Richard Nixon, an opponent of the program,[22][23][24] brought the Peace Corps under the umbrella agency ACTION. President Jimmy Carter, an advocate of the program, said that his mother, who had served as a nurse in the program, had "one of the most glorious experiences of her life" in the Peace Corps.[42] In 1979, he made it fully autonomous in an executive order. This independent status was further secured by 1981 legislation making the organization an independent federal agency.

In 1976, Deborah Gardner was found murdered in her home in Tonga, where she was serving in the Peace Corps. Dennis Priven, a fellow Peace Corps worker, was later charged with the murder by the Tonga government.[43] He was found not guilty by reason of insanity, and was sentenced to serve time in a mental institution in Washington D.C. Priven was never admitted to any institution, and the handling of the case has been heavily criticized. The main criticism has been that the Peace Corps seemingly worked to keep one of its volunteers from being found guilty of murder, due to the reflection it would have on the organization.[44]

2000–present

Although the earliest volunteers were typically thought of as generalists, the Peace Corps had requests for technical personnel from the start. For example, geologists were among the first volunteers requested by Ghana, an early volunteer host. An article in Geotimes (a trade publication) in 1963, reviewed the program, with a follow-up history of Peace Corps geoscientists appearing in that publication in 2004.[45] During the Nixon Administration the Peace Corps included foresters, computer scientists, and small business advisers among its volunteers.

In 1982, President Ronald Reagan appointed director Loret Miller Ruppe, who initiated business-related programs. For the first time, a significant number of conservative and Republican volunteers joined the Corps, as the organization continued to reflect the evolving political and social conditions in the United States. Funding cuts during the early 1980s reduced the number of volunteers to 5,380, its lowest level since the early years. Funding increased in 1985, when Congress began raising the number of volunteers, reaching 10,000 in 1992.

 
Peace Corps trainees swearing in as volunteers in Madagascar, April 26, 2006.

After the 2001 September 11 attacks, which alerted the U.S. to growing anti-U.S. sentiment in the Middle East, President George W. Bush pledged to double the size of the organization within five years as a part of the War on Terrorism. For the 2004 fiscal year, Congress increased the budget to US$325 million, US$30 million above that of 2003 but US$30 million below the President's request.

As part of an economic stimulus package in 2008, President Barack Obama proposed to double the size of the Peace Corps.[46] However, as of 2010, the amount requested was insufficient to reach this goal by 2011. In fact, the number of applicants to the Peace Corps declined steadily from a high of 15,384 in 2009 to 10,118 in 2013.[47] Congress raised the 2010 appropriation from the US$373 million requested by the President to US$400 million, and proposed bills would raise this further for 2011 and 2012.[48] According to former director Gaddi Vasquez, the Peace Corps is trying to recruit more diverse volunteers of different ages and make it look "more like America".[49] A Harvard International Review article from 2007 proposed to expand the Peace Corps, revisit its mission, and equip it with new technology.[50] In 1961 only 1% of volunteers were over 50, compared with 5% today. Ethnic minorities currently comprise 34% of volunteers,[51] compared to around 35% of the U.S. population.[52]

In 2009, Casey Frazee, who was sexually assaulted while serving in South Africa, created First Response Action, an advocacy group for a stronger Peace Corps response for volunteers who are survivors or victims of physical and sexual violence.[53][54] In 2010, concerns about the safety of volunteers were illustrated by a report, compiled from official public documents, listing hundreds of violent crimes against volunteers since 1989.[55] In 2011, a 20/20 investigation found that "more than 1,000 young American women have been raped or sexually assaulted in the last decade while serving as Peace Corps volunteers in foreign countries."[56]

In a historic first, all Peace Corps volunteers worldwide were withdrawn from their host countries on March 15, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[57] Volunteers were not eligible for unemployment or health benefits, although some Members of Congress said they should be. Legislators also called upon FEMA to hire Peace Corps volunteers until the end of their service.[58]

International presence

 
  Countries served by Peace Corps volunteers as of 2019.[59]
  Countries formerly served.[60]
 
Prime Minister George Cadle Price and a Peace Corps volunteer, Belize, 1976

During its history, Peace Corps volunteers have worked in the following countries:[61]

Latin America and the Caribbean (23% of volunteers serve here, 2019)

Europe and central Asia (13% of volunteers serve here, 2019)

Middle East and north Africa (3% of volunteers serve here, 2019)

Subsaharan Africa (46% of volunteers serve here, 2019)

Asia (11% of volunteers serve here, 2019)

Oceania (5% of volunteers serve here, 2019)

Peace Corps activities were suspended and all volunteers worldwide were evacuated on March 15, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[70]

Application and volunteer process

 
Recruitment advert placed in a 1990 issue of State Magazine

The application for the Peace Corps takes up to one hour, unless one talks to a recruiter. The applicant must be at least 18 years old and a U.S. citizen and, according to a 2018 document, they should apply 6 to 9 months before they want to leave. They must go through an interview.[71]

Applicants can apply to only one placement every year. Placements can be sorted through the Peace Corps six project sectors: Agriculture, Environment, Community Economic Development, Health, Education, and Youth in Development. Applicants may also narrow down their application of choice by country they want to serve in various regions of the world.

Peace Corps volunteers are expected to serve for 2 years in the foreign country, with 3 months of training before swearing in to service. This occurs in country with host country national trainers in language and assignment skills.

Prior to 2014, the application process took about a year.[72]

Initiatives

The Peace Corps aims to educate community members on the different illnesses that are present in developing countries as well as what treatments exist in order prevent these illnesses from spreading. Volunteers are also often there in order to teach community members about modern agricultural techniques in order for them to more effectively produce food for themselves and each other (Peace Corps). The Corps is also a proponent of equal education and moves to allow for equal education opportunities for girls in countries like Liberia and Ethiopia. In 2015, the organization partnered with United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to implement First Lady Michelle Obama's Let Girls Learn initiative.[73]

Eradicating malaria in Africa

The Corps launched its initiative to engage volunteers in malaria control efforts in 2011. The initiative, which grew out of malaria prevention programs in Peace Corps Senegal, now includes volunteers in 24 African countries.[74][75]

Environment

The Corps offers a variety of environmental programs. Needs assessments determine which programs apply to each country. Programs include effective and efficient forms of farming, recycling, park management, environmental education, and developing alternative fuel sources.[76] Volunteers must have some combination of academic degrees and practical experience.

The three major programs are Protected-Areas Management, Environment Education or Awareness, and Forestry.

In Protected areas management, volunteers work with parks or other programs to teach resource conservation. Volunteer activities include technical training, working with park staff on wildlife preservation, organizing community-based conservation programs for sustainable use of forests or marine resources, and creating activities for raising revenue to protect the environment.

Environment Education or Awareness focuses on communities that have environmental issues regarding farming and income. Programs include teaching in elementary and secondary schools; environmental education to youth programs; creation of environmental groups; support forest and marine resource sustainability; ways of generating money; urban sanitation management; and educating farmers about soil conservation, forestry, and vegetable gardening.[77]

Forestry programs help communities conserve natural resources through projects such as soil conservation, flood control, creation of sustainable fuels, agroforestry (e.g., fruit and vegetable production), alley cropping, and protection of biodiversity.[78]

Peace Corps Response

Peace Corps Response, formerly named the Crisis Corps, was created by Peace Corps Director Mark Gearan in 1996.[79] Gearan modeled the Crisis Corps after the National Peace Corps Association's successful Emergency Response Network (ERN) of Returned Peace Corps Volunteers willing to respond to crises when needed. ERN emerged in response to the 1994 Rwandan genocide.[80] On November 19, 2007 Peace Corps Director Ronald Tschetter changed Crisis Corps's name to Peace Corps Response.[81]

The change to Peace Corps Response allowed Peace Corps to include projects that did not rise to the level of a crisis. The program deploys former volunteers on high-impact assignments that typically range from three to twelve months in duration.

Peace Corps Response volunteers generally receive the same allowances and benefits as their Peace Corps counterparts, including round-trip transportation, living and readjustment allowances, and medical care. Minimum qualifications include completion of at least one year of Peace Corps service, including training, in addition to medical and legal clearances. The Crisis Corps title was retained as a unique branch within Peace Corps Response, designed for volunteers who are deployed to true "crisis" situations, such as disaster relief following hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, volcanic eruptions and other catastrophes.

Education and languages

Peace Corps has created resources for teachers in the US and abroad to teach 101 languages.[82][83] Resources vary by language, and include text, recordings, lesson plans and teaching notes.

Laws governing the Peace Corps

Executive orders

Peace Corps was originally established by Executive Order, and has been modified by several subsequent executive orders including:

  • 1961 – Executive Order 10924 – Establishment and administration of the Peace Corps in the Department of State (Kennedy)[84]
  • 1962 – Executive Order 11041 – Continuance and administration of the Peace Corps in the Department of State (Kennedy)[85]
  • 1963 – Executive Order 11103 – Providing for the appointment of former Peace Corps volunteers to the civilian career services (Kennedy)[86]
  • 1971 – Executive Order 11603 – Assigning additional functions to the Director of ACTION (Nixon)
  • 1979 – Executive Order 12137 – The Peace Corps (Carter)[87]

Laws

Federal laws governing the Peace Corps are contained in Title 22 of the United States Code – Foreign Relations and Intercourse, Chapter 34 – The Peace Corps.[88]

Public laws are passed by Congress and the President and create or modify the U.S. Code. The first public law establishing Peace Corps in the US Code was The Peace Corps Act passed by the 87th Congress and signed into law on September 22, 1961. Several public laws have modified the Peace Corps Act, including:

  • Pub. L. 87–293, 75 Stat. 612, enacted September 22, 1961 – The Peace Corps Act
  • Pub. L. 88–200, 77 Stat. 359, enacted December 13, 1963
  • Pub. L. 89–134, 79 Stat. 549, enacted August 24, 1965
  • Pub. L. 89–554, 80 Stat. 378, enacted September 6, 1966
  • Pub. L. 89–572, 80 Stat. 764, enacted September 13, 1966
  • Pub. L. 91–99, 83 Stat. 166, enacted October 29, 1969
  • Pub. L. 91–352, 84 Stat. 464, enacted July 24, 1970
  • Pub. L. 94–130, 89 Stat. 684, enacted November 14, 1975 – Bill to carry into effect certain provisions of the Patent Cooperation Treaty, and for other purposes.[89]
  • Pub. L. 95–331, 92 Stat. 414, enacted August 2, 1978 – Peace Corps Act Amendments[90]
  • Pub. L. 96–465, 94 Stat. 2071, enacted October 17, 1980 – The Foreign Service Act of 1980[91]
  • Pub. L. 97–113, 95 Stat. 1519, enacted December 29, 1981 – International Security and Development Cooperation Act of 1981[92]
  • Pub. L. 99–83, 99 Stat. 190, enacted August 8, 1985 – International Security and Development Cooperation Act of 1985[93]
  • Pub. L. 99–514, 100 Stat. 2085, enacted October 22, 1986 – Tax Reform Act of 1986[94]
  • Pub. L. 102–565, 106 Stat. 4265, enacted October 28, 1992 – A bill to amend the Peace Corps Act to authorize appropriations for the Peace Corps for FY1993 and to establish Peace Corps foreign exchange fluctuations account, and for other purposes.[95]
  • Pub. L. 105–12 (text) (PDF), 111 Stat. 23, enacted April 30, 1997 – The Assisted Suicide Funding Restriction Act of 1997[96]
  • Pub. L. 106–30 (text) (PDF), 113 Stat. 55, enacted May 21, 1999 – Peace Corps Act, FY2002, 2003 Authorization Bill[97]
  • Peace Corps Reauthorization Act of 2008 at Congress.gov

Code of Federal Regulations

The Peace Corps is subject to Federal Regulations as prescribed by public law and executive order and contained in Title 22 of the Code of Federal Regulations under Chapter 3.

Limitations on former volunteers

Former members of the Peace Corps may not be assigned to military intelligence duties for a period of 4 years following Peace Corps service. Furthermore, they are forever prohibited from serving in a military intelligence posting to any country in which they volunteered.[98] Former members may not apply for employment with the Central Intelligence Agency for a period of 5 years following Peace Corps Service.

Time limits on employment

Peace Corps employees receive time-limited appointments, and most employees are limited to a maximum of five years of employment. This time limit was established to ensure that Peace Corps' staff remain fresh and innovative. A related rule specifies that former employees cannot be re-employed until after the same amount of time that they were employed. Volunteer service is not counted for the purposes of either rule.[99]

Union representation

Non-supervisory domestic employees are represented by the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 3548. The Federal Labor Relations Agency certified the Union on May 11, 1983. About 500 domestic employees are members. The current collective bargaining agreement became effective on April 21, 1995.

Leadership

Directors

On January 3, 2018, President Donald Trump nominated Josephine "Jody" Olsen as the 20th director of the Peace Corps.[100] Olsen has a long history with the agency, serving as Acting Director in 2009, Deputy Director from 2002 to 2009, Chief of Staff from 1989 to 1992, Regional Director, North Africa Near East, Asia, Pacific from 1981 to 1984, and Country Director in Togo from 1979 to 1981. Olsen also served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Tunisia from 1966 to 1968.[100][101] She left office on January 20, 2021.[102]

In April 2022, President Biden nominated Carol Spahn as director to succeed Olsen,[103] and she was confirmed by the United States Senate on December 13, 2022.[104] Spahn was acting director from January 20, 2021, until November 16, 2021, and CEO from November 2021 to November 2022.[105] She had previously served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Romania and subsequently returned as Country Director in Malawi, then Chief of Operations for Eastern and Southern Africa, following a career in the NGO and private sectors.

The full list of directors is as follows:

No. Image Director Service dates Appointed by Summary of Wikipedia page
1   R. Sargent Shriver[106] 1961–1966[106] Kennedy[106] President Kennedy appointed Shriver three days after signing the executive order.[107] Volunteers arrived in five countries during 1961.[108] In just under six years, Shriver developed programs in 55 countries with more than 14,500 volunteers.[107]
2   Jack Vaughn 1966–1969 Johnson Vaughn improved marketing, programming, and volunteer support as large numbers of former volunteers joined the staff. He also promoted volunteer assignments in conservation, natural resource management, and community development.
3   Joseph Blatchford 1969–1971 Nixon Blatchford served as head of the new ACTION agency, which included the Corps. He created the Office of Returned Volunteers to help volunteers serve in their communities at home, and initiated New Directions, a program emphasizing volunteer skills.
4   Kevin O'Donnell 1971–1972 Nixon O'Donnell's appointment was the first for a former Peace Corps country director (Korea, 1966–70). He fought budget cuts, and believed strongly in a non-career Peace Corps.
5   Donald Hess 1972–1973 Nixon Hess initiated training of volunteers in the host country where they would eventually serve, using host country nationals. The training provided more realistic preparation, and costs dropped for the agency. Hess also sought to end the downsizing of the Peace Corps.
6   Nicholas Craw 1973–1974 Nixon Craw sought to increase the number of volunteers in the field and to stabilize the agency's future. He introduced a goal-setting measurement plan, the Country Management Plan, which gained increased Congressional support and improved resource allocation across the 69 participating countries.
7   John Dellenback 1975–1977 Ford Dellenback improved volunteer health care available. He emphasized recruiting generalists. He believed in committed applicants even those without specific skills and instead training them for service.
8   Carolyn R. Payton 1977–1978 Carter Payton was the first female director and the first African American. She focused on improving volunteer diversity.
9   Richard F. Celeste 1979–1981 Carter Celeste focused on the role of women in development and increased women and minority participation, particularly for staff positions. He invested heavily in training, including the development of a worldwide core curriculum.
10   Loret Miller Ruppe 1981–1989 Reagan Ruppe was the longest-serving director and championed women in development roles. She launched the Competitive Enterprise Development program, the Caribbean Basin Initiative, the Initiative for Central America and the African Food Systems Initiative.
11   Paul Coverdell 1989–1991 G.H.W. Bush Coverdell established two programs with a domestic focus. World Wise Schools enabled U.S. students to correspond with overseas volunteers. Fellows/USA assisted Returned Peace Corps volunteers in pursuing graduate studies while serving local communities.
12   Elaine Chao 1991–1992 G.H.W. Bush Chao was the first Asian American director. She expanded Peace Corps' presence in Eastern Europe and Central Asia by establishing the first Peace Corps programs in Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, and other newly independent countries.
13   Carol Bellamy 1993–1995 Clinton Bellamy was the first RPCV (Returned Peace Corps volunteer) (Guatemala 1963–65) to be director. She reinvigorated relations with former volunteers and launched the Corps' web site.
14   Mark D. Gearan 1995–1999 Clinton Gearan established the Crisis Corps, a program that allows former volunteers to help overseas communities recover from natural disasters and humanitarian crises. He supported expanding the corps and opened new volunteer programs in South Africa, Jordan, Bangladesh and Mozambique.
15   Mark L. Schneider 1999–2001 Clinton Schneider was the second RPCV (El Salvador, 1966–68) to head the agency. He launched an initiative to increase volunteers' participation in helping prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS in Africa, and also sought volunteers to work on information technology projects.
16   Gaddi Vasquez 2002–2006 G.W. Bush Gaddi H. Vasquez was the first Hispanic American director. His focus was to increase volunteer and staff diversity. He also led the establishment of a Peace Corps program in Mexico.
17   Ron Tschetter September 2006 – 2008 G.W. Bush The third RPCV to head the agency, Tschetter served in India in the mid-1960s. He launched an initiative known as the "50 and Over," to increase the participation of older men and women.
18   Aaron S. Williams August 2009 – September 2012 Obama Aaron S. Williams became director on August 24, 2009. Mr. Williams is the fourth director to have served as a volunteer. Williams cited personal and family considerations as the reason for his stepping down as Peace Corps Director on September 17, 2012.[109]
19   Carrie Hessler-Radelet September 2012 – 2017 Obama Carrie Hessler-Radelet became acting Director of the Peace Corps in September 2012. Previously, Hessler-Radelet served as deputy director of the Peace Corps from June 23, 2010, until her appointment as acting Director.[110] From 1981 to 1983, she served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Western Samoa with her husband, Steve. She was confirmed as Director on June 5, 2014.
20   Jody Olsen February 2018 – January 2021 Trump Jody Olsen was confirmed Director of the Peace Corps on February 27, 2018. Olsen previously served the Peace Corps as Acting Director in 2009, Deputy Director from 2002 to 2009, Chief of Staff from 1989 to 1992, Regional Director, North Africa Near East, Asia, Pacific from 1981 to 1984, and Country Director in Togo from 1979 to 1981. Olsen also served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Tunisia from 1966 to 1968.
21   Carol Spahn January 2023 – present Biden Carol Spahn previously served in acting capacity in this position from January to November 2021. She was then appointed CEO of the Peace Corps and served from November 2021 to November 2022, later being nominated to director in April 2022. Spahn also served as Chief of Operations for Eastern and Southern Africa, Country Director for Malawi, and a volunteer in Romania.

Inspector General

The Peace Corps Office of Inspector General is authorized by law to review all programs and operations of the Peace Corps.[citation needed] The OIG is an independent entity within the Peace Corps. The inspector general (IG) reports directly to the Peace Corps Director. In addition, the IG reports to Congress semiannually with data on OIG activities.[citation needed] The OIG serves as the law enforcement arm of the Peace Corps and works closely with the Department of State, the Department of Justice, and other federal agencies OIG has three sections to conduct its functions:

Audit – Auditors review functional activities of the Peace Corps, such as contract compliance and financial and program operations, to ensure accountability and to recommend improved levels of economy and efficiency;

Evaluations – Evaluators analyze the management and program operations of the Peace Corps at both overseas posts and domestic offices. They identify best practices and recommend program improvements and ways to accomplish Peace Corps' mission and strategic goals.

Investigations – Investigators respond to allegations of criminal or administrative wrongdoing by Peace Corps Volunteers, Peace Corps personnel, including experts and consultants, and by those who do business with the Peace Corps, including contractors.[111]

From 2006 to 2007, H. David Kotz was the Inspector General.[112]

Criticism

Critics and criticisms of Peace Corps include former volunteer and country director Robert L. Strauss in Foreign Policy,[113] The New York Times,[114] The American Interest [115] and elsewhere, an article by a former volunteer describing assaults on volunteers from 1992 to 2010,[116] an ABC news report on 20/20,[117] a Huffington Post article on former Peace Corps volunteers speaking out on rapes,[118] and About.com's article on rape and assault in the Peace Corps.[119]

In the Reagan Administration, in 1986, an article in the Multinational Monitor looked critically at the Peace Corps.[120] On a positive note, the writer praises the Corps for aspects saying that it is "not in the business of transferring massive economic resources. Rather it concentrates on increasing productivity and encouraging self-reliance in villages that are often ignored by large-scale development agencies," and notes the "heavy emphasis on basic education" by the Corps. "Many returned volunteers complain that the Peace Corps does little to promote or make use of their rich experiences once they return ... [A] Peace Corps volunteer is sent in ... [to] relieve ... the local government from having to develop policies that assure equitable distribution of health care ... During the early years there were many failures in structure and programming ... Some critics charge that the Peace Corps is only a somewhat ineffective attempt to counter damage done to the U.S. image abroad by its aggressive military and its unscrupulous businesses ... Many observers and some returned volunteers charge that, in addition to public relations for the United States, Peace Corps programs serve to legitimize dictators ... When he began evaluating the Corps in the 1960s, Charlie Peters found "they were training volunteers to be junior diplomats. Giving them a course in American studies, world affairs and communism ... Although it seems unlikely that the Peace Corps is used in covert operations, wittingly or not it is often used in conjunction with U.S. military interests ... In a review of the Peace Corps in March the House Select Committee on Hunger praised the agency for effective work in the areas of agriculture and conservation, while recommending that the Corps expand its African Food Systems Initiative, increase the number of volunteers in the field, recruit more women, and move to depoliticize country dictatorships."[120]

The author suggests that "the poor should be encouraged to organize a power base to gain more leverage with the powers-that-be" by the Peace Corps and that "The Peace Corps is the epitome of Kennedy's Camelot mythology. It is a tall order to expect a small program appended to an immense superpower, to make a difference, but it is a goal worth striving for."

In December 2003, a report by the Brookings Institution praised the Peace Corps but proposed changes.[121] These include relabeling Peace Corps volunteers in certain countries, greater host country ownership, reverse volunteers (have volunteers from the host country in the U.S.), and multilateral volunteers. The Brookings Institution wrote that a "one-year service commitment [for the Baby Boom generation] could make the Peace Corps more attractive to older Americans, possibly combined with the option of returning to the same site or country after a three-month break" and customized placement to a specific country would increase the number of people volunteering.

In a critique by The Future of Freedom Foundation,[122] James Bovard mixes history of the Peace Corps with current interpretations. He writes that in the 1980s, "The Peace Corps's world-saving pretensions were a joke on American taxpayers and Third World folks who expected real help." He goes on to criticize the difference in rhetoric and action of Peace Corps volunteers, even attacking its establishment as "the epitome of emotionalism in American politics." Using snippets of reports, accounts of those in countries affected by the Peace Corps and even concluded that at one point "some Peace Corps agricultural efforts directly hurt Third World poor." At the end of the article, Bovard noted that all Peace Corps volunteers he had talked with conceded they have not helped foreigners ... but he acknowledges that "Some Peace Corps volunteers, like some Americans who volunteer for religion missions abroad, have truly helped foreigners."[citation needed]

Sexual assault

The Peace Corps has been criticized for failing to properly respond to the sexual violence that many of its female volunteers face.[123] BoingBoing editor Xeni Jardin describes criticism of the agency's response to assault: "A growing number of ex-Peace Corps volunteers are speaking out about having survived rape and other forms of sexual assault while assigned overseas. They say the agency ignored their concerns for safety or requests for relocation, and tried to blame rape victims for their attacks. Their stories, and support from families and advocates, are drawing attention from lawmakers and promises of reform from the agency". Among 8,655 volunteers there are on average 22 Peace Corps women who reported being the victims of rape or attempted rape each year.[124][125]

At a meeting of the House Foreign Affairs Committee in 2011, Peace Corps volunteers shared their experiences of violence and sexual assault. At this meeting, it was found that between 2000 and 2009 there have been several cases of rape or attempted rape, and about 22 women are sexually assaulted each year. The case of murdered Peace Corps volunteer Kate Puzey was discussed. The Peace Corps has gained attention in the media and their directors have been attacked for how they handled this situation. Kate Puzey's mother was one of those to make a comment at the meeting about how badly the situation with her daughter had been handled. One woman claimed that her country's director had blamed her for getting raped, while other victims have also been similarly blamed.[126] Criticism of how Peace Corps has responded to sexual assaults against volunteers culminated in the appointment of Kellie Green as the agency's first Director of the Office Of Victims Advocacy in 2011. Green was eventually pushed out of her position in April 2015 for purportedly "creating a hostile work environment". Greene maintains that Peace Corps retaliated against her for pressing agency officials to fully comply with their responsibilities towards volunteers who have been victims of sexual assault. A Change.org petition demanding that Green be reinstated began circulating among former volunteers in December 2015.[127]

In 2009, the most recent year reported, 69% of Peace Corps crime victims were women, 88% were under 30, and 82% were Caucasian. Worldwide, there were 15 cases of rape/attempted rape and 96 cases of sexual assault reported for a total of 111 sexual crimes committed against female Peace Corps volunteers. The majority of women who join the Peace Corps are in their mid-twenties. In 62% of the more than 2,900 assault cases since 1990, the victim was identified as being alone. In 59% of assault cases, the victim was identified as a woman in her 20s.[128]

In popular culture

Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention have a song named "Who Needs the Peace Corps?" on their 1968 album We're Only in It for the Money.

In popular culture, the Peace Corps has been used as a comedic plot device in such movies as Airplane!, Christmas with the Kranks, Shallow Hal, and Volunteers or used to set the scene for a historic era, as when Frances "Baby" Houseman tells the audience she plans to join the Peace Corps in the introduction to the movie Dirty Dancing.[129]

The Peace Corps has also been documented on film and examined more seriously and in more depth. The 2006 documentary film Death of Two Sons, directed by Micah Schaffer, juxtaposes the deaths of Amadou Diallo, a Guinean-American who was gunned down by four New York City policemen with 41 bullets, and Peace Corps volunteer Jesse Thyne who lived with Amadou's family in Guinea and died in a car crash there.[130] Jimi Sir, released in 2007, is a documentary portrait of volunteer James Parks' experiences as a high school science, math and English teacher during the last 10 weeks of his service in Nepal.[131] James speaks Nepali fluently and shows a culture where there are no roads, vehicles, electricity, plumbing, telephone or radio.[131] The movie El Rey, directed and written by Antonio Dorado in 2004, attacks corrupt police, unscrupulous politicians and half-hearted revolutionaries but also depicts the urban legend of Peace Corps Volunteers "training" native Colombians how to process coca leaves into cocaine.[132]

In the 1969 film, Yawar Mallku/Sangre de cóndor/Blood of the Condor, Bolivian director Jorge Sanjinés portrayed Peace Corps volunteers in the camp as arrogant, ethnocentric, and narrow-minded imperialists out to destroy Indian culture. One particularly powerful scene showed Indians attacking a clinic while the volunteers inside sterilized Indian women against their will. The film is thought to be at least partially responsible for the expulsion of the Peace Corps from Bolivia in 1971. Peace Corps volunteer Fred Krieger who was serving in Bolivia at the time said, "It was an effective movie – emotionally very arousing – and it directly targeted Peace Corps volunteers. I thought I would be lynched before getting out of the theatre. To my amazement, people around me smiled courteously as we left, no one commented, it was just like any other movie."[133]

In 2016, Peace Corps partnered with jewelry retailer Alex and Ani to create cord bracelets to raise money for the Peace Corps' Let Girls Learn Fund.[134]

Fictional Peace Corps volunteers

  • Frances "Baby" Houseman in the 1987 film Dirty Dancing plans to join the Peace Corps after graduating from Mount Holyoke.[135]
  • In The Waltons Elizabeth Walton joins the Peace Corps in the TV Movie series
  • In Boy Meets World, Jack and Rachel graduate from the fictional Pennbrook University and join the Peace Corps.[136]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Executive Order 10924

References

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Further reading

  • Bernstein, Irving. (1991) Promises Kept: John F. Kennedy's New Frontier pp 259–79.
  • Latham, Michael E. Modernization as ideology: American social science and" nation building" in the Kennedy era. (U of North Carolina Press, 2000). Online
  • May, Gary. "Passing the Torch and Lighting Fires: The Peace Corps," in Thomas G. Paterson, ed. Kennedy's Quest for Victory: American Foreign Policy, 1961–1963 (1989) pp 284–316.
  • The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol. 365, May, 1966; online at JSTOR Contents:
      • Foreword . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . J. Norman Parmer ix
      • The Peace Corps In Our Past . . . . . . . . . . Charles J. Wetzel 1
      • A Discovery Of Commitment ............... Joseph G. Colman 12
      • Selection Of Volunteers .................. Edwin R. Henry 21
      • The Preparation Of Peace Corps Volunteers For Overseas Service Donald R. Shea 29
      • The Beginnings Of Peace Corps Programming ........ George E. Carter 46
      • Volunteers In The Field: Great Expectations ......... Neil A. Boyer 55
      • The Peace Corps Volunteer In The Field: Community Development ... Kirby Jones 63
      • Volunteers In The Field: Teaching ............ . Arnold Deutchman 72
      • The Overseas Staff .................... Lewis H. Butler 83
      • The Peace Corps And The Private Sector: The Failure Of A Partnership Thomas D. Scott 93
      • The Returning Volunteer ................ Robert Calvert, Jr. 105
      • Evaluation And The Question Of Change .......... Meridan Bennett 119
      • The Future Of The Peace Corps ............... Harris Wofford
      • Oral Communication Approved Peer Reviewed.........Saul Morgan Del Bagno

External links

  • Czernek, Andrew (2012).
  • Tarnoff, Curt (April 26, 2018). The Peace Corps: Current Issues. Congressional Research Service
  • In March 2011, the VOA Special English service of the Voice of America broadcast a 15-minute program on the Peace Corps and its 50th anniversary. A transcript and MP3 of the program, intended for English learners, can be found at "Peace Corps at 50: Same Mission of Aid, Just Smaller".
  • Official website
  • Records of the Peace Corps in the National Archives (Record Group 490)

peace, corps, iraqi, shia, militia, peace, companies, independent, agency, program, united, states, government, that, trains, deploys, volunteers, provide, international, development, assistance, established, march, 1961, executive, order, president, john, ken. For Iraqi Shia militia see Peace Companies The Peace Corps is an independent agency and program of the United States government that trains and deploys volunteers to provide international development assistance It was established in March 1961 by an executive order of President John F Kennedy note 1 and authorized by Congress the following September by the Peace Corps Act 2 Peace CorpsAgency overviewFormedMarch 1 1961 1961 03 01 JurisdictionUnited States GovernmentHeadquartersWashington D C Annual budgetUS 410 5 million FY 2020 1 Agency executivesCarol Spahn DirectorThomas Peng Chief Executive OfficerLauren Stephens Chief of StaffWebsitepeacecorps wbr govThe official goal of the Peace Corps is to assist developing countries by providing skilled workers in fields such as education health entrepreneurship women s empowerment and community development Volunteers are American citizens typically with a college degree who are assigned to specific projects in certain countries based on their qualifications and experience they often work with other stakeholders governments schools non profit organizations non governmental organizations and entrepreneurs 3 Following three months of technical training Peace Corps members are expected to serve at least two years in the host country after which they may request an extension of service 4 Volunteers are strongly encouraged to respect local customs learn the prevailing language and live in comparable conditions 3 5 In its inaugural year the Peace Corps had 900 volunteers serving 16 countries reaching its peak in 1966 with 15 556 volunteers in 52 countries Following budget cuts in 1989 the number of volunteers declined to 5 100 though subsequent increases in funding led to renewed growth into the 21st century by its 50th anniversary in 2011 there were over 8 500 volunteers serving in 77 countries Since its inception more than 240 000 Americans have joined the Peace Corps and served in 142 countries 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 1950 1959 1 2 1960 1969 1 3 Policies 1 4 1970 1999 1 5 2000 present 2 International presence 3 Application and volunteer process 4 Initiatives 4 1 Eradicating malaria in Africa 4 2 Environment 4 3 Peace Corps Response 4 4 Education and languages 5 Laws governing the Peace Corps 5 1 Executive orders 5 2 Laws 5 3 Code of Federal Regulations 5 4 Limitations on former volunteers 5 5 Time limits on employment 6 Union representation 7 Leadership 7 1 Directors 7 2 Inspector General 8 Criticism 8 1 Sexual assault 9 In popular culture 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory Edit1950 1959 Edit John F Kennedy greets volunteers on August 28 1961In 1950 Walter Reuther president of the United Auto Workers proposed in an article titled A Proposal for a Total Peace Offensive that the United States establish a voluntary agency for young Americans to be sent around the world to fulfill humanitarian and development objectives 7 Subsequently throughout the 1950s Reuther gave speeches to the following effect I have been saying for a long time that I believe the more young Americans who are trained to join with other young people in the world to be sent abroad with slide rule textbook and medical kit to help people help themselves with the tools of peace the fewer young people will need to be sent with guns and weapons of war 8 9 In addition following the end of World War II various members of the United States Congress proposed bills to establish volunteer organizations in developing countries In December 1951 Representative John F Kennedy D Massachusetts suggested to a group that young college graduates would find a full life in bringing technical advice and assistance to the underprivileged and backward Middle East In that calling these men would follow the constructive work done by the religious missionaries in these countries over the past 100 years 10 337 338 In 1952 Senator Brien McMahon D Connecticut proposed an army of young Americans to act as missionaries of democracy 11 Privately funded nonreligious organizations began sending volunteers overseas during the 1950s While Kennedy is credited with the creation of the Peace Corps as president the first initiative came from Senator Hubert H Humphrey Jr D Minnesota who introduced the first bill to create the Peace Corps in 1957 three years before Kennedy as a presidential candidate would raise the idea during a campaign speech at the University of Michigan In his autobiography The Education of a Public Man Humphrey wrote There were three bills of particular emotional importance to me the Peace Corps a disarmament agency and the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty The President knowing how I felt asked me to introduce legislation for all three I introduced the first Peace Corps bill in 1957 It did not meet with much enthusiasm Some traditional diplomats quaked at the thought of thousands of young Americans scattered across their world Many senators including liberal ones thought it silly and an unworkable idea Now with a young president urging its passage it became possible and we pushed it rapidly through the Senate It is fashionable now to suggest that Peace Corps Volunteers gained as much or more from their experience as the countries they worked That may be true but it ought not demean their work They touched many lives and made them better 12 The former Peace Corps headquarters at 1111 20th Street NW in downtown Washington D C Only in 1959 however did the idea receive serious attention in Washington when Congressman Henry S Reuss of Wisconsin proposed a Point Four Youth Corps In 1960 he and Senator Richard L Neuberger of Oregon introduced identical measures calling for a nongovernmental study of the idea s advisability and practicability Both the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee endorsed the study the latter writing the Reuss proposal into the pending Mutual Security legislation In this form it became law in June 1960 In August the Mutual Security Appropriations Act was enacted making available US 10 000 for the study and in November ICA contracted with Maurice Albertson Andrew E Rice and Pauline E Birky of Colorado State University Research Foundation 13 for the study 14 15 1960 1969 Edit In August 1960 following the 1960 Democratic National Convention Walter Reuther visited John F Kennedy at the Kennedy compound in Hyannisport to discuss Kennedy s platform and staffing of a future administration 16 It was there that Reuther got Kennedy to commit to creating the executive agency that would become the Peace Corps 16 Under Reuther s leadership the United Auto Workers had earlier that summer put together a policy platform that included a youth peace corps to be sent to developing nations 17 Subsequently at the urging of Reuther 18 John F Kennedy announced the idea for such an organization on October 14 1960 at a late night campaign speech at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor on the steps of the Michigan Union 19 20 He later dubbed the proposed organization the Peace Corps A brass marker commemorates the place where Kennedy stood In the weeks after the 1960 election the study group at Colorado State University released their feasibility a few days before Kennedy s Presidential Inauguration in January 1961 21 Critics opposed the program Kennedy s opponent Richard M Nixon predicted it would become a cult of escapism and a haven for draft dodgers 22 23 24 Others doubted whether recent graduates had the necessary skills and maturity for such a task The idea was popular among students however and Kennedy pursued it asking respected academics such as Max Millikan and Chester Bowles to help him outline the organization and its goals During his inaugural address Kennedy again promised to create the program And so my fellow Americans ask not what your country can do for you ask what you can do for your country 25 President Kennedy in a speech at the White House on June 22 1962 Remarks to Student Volunteers Participating in Operation Crossroads Africa acknowledged that Operation Crossroads for Africa was the basis for the development of the Peace Corps This group and this effort really were the progenitors of the Peace Corps and what this organization has been doing for a number of years led to the establishment of what I consider to be the most encouraging indication of the desire for service not only in this country but all around the world that we have seen in recent years 26 The Peace Corps website answered the question Who Inspired the Creation of the Peace Corps acknowledging that the Peace Corps were based on Operation Crossroads Africa founded by Rev James H Robinson 27 Executive Order 10924 Establishment of the Peace Corps source source John F Kennedy s announcement of the establishment of the Peace Corps Problems playing this file See media help On March 1 1961 Kennedy signed Executive Order 10924 that officially started the Peace Corps Concerned with the growing tide of revolutionary sentiment in the Third World Kennedy saw the Peace Corps as a means of countering the stereotype of the Ugly American and Yankee imperialism especially in the emerging nations of post colonial Africa and Asia 28 29 Kennedy appointed his brother in law Sargent Shriver to be the program s first director Shriver fleshed out the organization and his think tank outlined the organization s goals and set the initial number of volunteers The Peace Corps began recruiting in July 1962 Bob Hope recorded radio and television announcements hailing the program Until about 1967 applicants had to pass a placement test of general aptitude knowledge of various skills needed for Peace Corps assignments and language aptitude 30 31 After an address from Kennedy who was introduced by Rev Russell Fuller of Memorial Christian Church Disciples of Christ on August 28 1961 the first group of volunteers left for Ghana and Tanzania known as Tanganyika at the time 32 The program was formally authorized by Congress on September 22 1961 and within two years over 7 300 volunteers were serving in 44 countries This number increased to 15 000 in June 1966 the largest number in the organization s history 33 The organization experienced controversy in its first year of operation On October 13 1961 a postcard from a volunteer named Margery Jane Michelmore in Nigeria to a friend in the U S described her situation in Nigeria as squalor and absolutely primitive living conditions 34 35 However this postcard never made it out of the country 35 The University of Ibadan College Students Union demanded deportation and accused the volunteers of being America s international spies and the project as a scheme designed to foster neocolonialism 36 Soon the international press picked up the story leading several people in the U S administration to question the program 37 Nigerian students protested the program while the American volunteers sequestered themselves and eventually began a hunger strike 35 After several days the Nigerian students agreed to open a dialogue with the Americans Policies Edit Establishment of the Peace Corps source source John F Kennedy s announcement of the establishment of the Peace Corps Problems playing this file See media help The theme of enabling Americans to volunteer in poor countries appealed to Kennedy because it fit in with his campaign themes of self sacrifice and volunteerism while also providing a way to redefine American relations with the Third World Upon taking office Kennedy issued an executive order establishing the Peace Corps Shriver not Kennedy energetically lobbied Congress for approval Kennedy proudly took the credit and ensured that it remained free of CIA influence He largely left its administration to Shriver To avoid the appearance of favoritism to the Catholic Church the Corps did not place its volunteers with any religious agencies 38 In the first twenty five years more than 100 000 Americans served in 44 countries as part of the program Most volunteers taught English in local schools but many became involved in activities like construction and food delivery Shriver practiced affirmative action and women comprised about 40 percent of the first 7000 volunteers However given the paucity of black college graduates racial minorities never reached five percent The Corps developed its own training program based on nine weeks at an American university with a focus on conversational language world affairs and desired job skills 39 That was followed by three weeks at a Peace Corps camp in Puerto Rico and week or two of orientation the home and the host country 40 41 1970 1999 Edit In July 1971 President Richard Nixon an opponent of the program 22 23 24 brought the Peace Corps under the umbrella agency ACTION President Jimmy Carter an advocate of the program said that his mother who had served as a nurse in the program had one of the most glorious experiences of her life in the Peace Corps 42 In 1979 he made it fully autonomous in an executive order This independent status was further secured by 1981 legislation making the organization an independent federal agency In 1976 Deborah Gardner was found murdered in her home in Tonga where she was serving in the Peace Corps Dennis Priven a fellow Peace Corps worker was later charged with the murder by the Tonga government 43 He was found not guilty by reason of insanity and was sentenced to serve time in a mental institution in Washington D C Priven was never admitted to any institution and the handling of the case has been heavily criticized The main criticism has been that the Peace Corps seemingly worked to keep one of its volunteers from being found guilty of murder due to the reflection it would have on the organization 44 2000 present Edit Although the earliest volunteers were typically thought of as generalists the Peace Corps had requests for technical personnel from the start For example geologists were among the first volunteers requested by Ghana an early volunteer host An article in Geotimes a trade publication in 1963 reviewed the program with a follow up history of Peace Corps geoscientists appearing in that publication in 2004 45 During the Nixon Administration the Peace Corps included foresters computer scientists and small business advisers among its volunteers In 1982 President Ronald Reagan appointed director Loret Miller Ruppe who initiated business related programs For the first time a significant number of conservative and Republican volunteers joined the Corps as the organization continued to reflect the evolving political and social conditions in the United States Funding cuts during the early 1980s reduced the number of volunteers to 5 380 its lowest level since the early years Funding increased in 1985 when Congress began raising the number of volunteers reaching 10 000 in 1992 Peace Corps trainees swearing in as volunteers in Madagascar April 26 2006 After the 2001 September 11 attacks which alerted the U S to growing anti U S sentiment in the Middle East President George W Bush pledged to double the size of the organization within five years as a part of the War on Terrorism For the 2004 fiscal year Congress increased the budget to US 325 million US 30 million above that of 2003 but US 30 million below the President s request As part of an economic stimulus package in 2008 President Barack Obama proposed to double the size of the Peace Corps 46 However as of 2010 update the amount requested was insufficient to reach this goal by 2011 In fact the number of applicants to the Peace Corps declined steadily from a high of 15 384 in 2009 to 10 118 in 2013 47 Congress raised the 2010 appropriation from the US 373 million requested by the President to US 400 million and proposed bills would raise this further for 2011 and 2012 48 According to former director Gaddi Vasquez the Peace Corps is trying to recruit more diverse volunteers of different ages and make it look more like America 49 A Harvard International Review article from 2007 proposed to expand the Peace Corps revisit its mission and equip it with new technology 50 In 1961 only 1 of volunteers were over 50 compared with 5 today Ethnic minorities currently comprise 34 of volunteers 51 compared to around 35 of the U S population 52 In 2009 Casey Frazee who was sexually assaulted while serving in South Africa created First Response Action an advocacy group for a stronger Peace Corps response for volunteers who are survivors or victims of physical and sexual violence 53 54 In 2010 concerns about the safety of volunteers were illustrated by a report compiled from official public documents listing hundreds of violent crimes against volunteers since 1989 55 In 2011 a 20 20 investigation found that more than 1 000 young American women have been raped or sexually assaulted in the last decade while serving as Peace Corps volunteers in foreign countries 56 In a historic first all Peace Corps volunteers worldwide were withdrawn from their host countries on March 15 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic 57 Volunteers were not eligible for unemployment or health benefits although some Members of Congress said they should be Legislators also called upon FEMA to hire Peace Corps volunteers until the end of their service 58 International presence Edit Countries served by Peace Corps volunteers as of 2019 59 Countries formerly served 60 Prime Minister George Cadle Price and a Peace Corps volunteer Belize 1976 During its history Peace Corps volunteers have worked in the following countries 61 Latin America and the Caribbean 23 of volunteers serve here 2019 Argentina 1992 1994 Belize since 1962 Bolivia 1962 1971 1990 2008 Brazil 1962 1981 Chile 1961 1982 1991 1998 Colombia 1961 1981 since 2010 Costa Rica since 1963 Dominica since 1961 Dominican Republic since 1962 Ecuador since 1962 El Salvador 1962 1980 1993 2016 62 Grenada since 1961 Guatemala since 1963 Guyana 1966 1971 since 1995 Haiti 1982 1987 1990 1991 1996 2005 Honduras 1962 2012 63 Jamaica since 1962 Mexico since 2004 Nicaragua 1968 1979 since 1991 Panama 1963 1971 since 1990 Paraguay since 1966 Peru 1962 1974 since 2002 Saint Lucia since 1961 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines since 1961 Suriname 1995 2013 Uruguay 1963 1973 1991 1997 Venezuela 1962 1976 64 Europe and central Asia 13 of volunteers serve here 2019 Albania 1992 1997 since 2003 Armenia since 1992 Azerbaijan 2003 2016 Bosnia and Herzegovina 2000 2002 Bulgaria 1991 2013 Cyprus 1962 1964 Czechia 1990 1997 Estonia 1992 2002 Georgia since 2001 Hungary 1990 1997 Kazakhstan 1993 2011 Latvia 1992 2002 Lithuania 1992 2002 Kosovo since 2014 Kyrgyzstan since 1993 North Macedonia since 1996 Malta 1970 1975 1990 1998 Moldova since 1993 Poland 1990 2001 Romania 1991 2013 Russia 1992 2003 Slovakia 1990 2002 Turkmenistan 1993 2013 Turkey 1962 1971 Uzbekistan 1992 2005 Ukraine since 1992 64 Middle East and north Africa 3 of volunteers serve here 2019 Bahrain 1974 1979 Iran 1962 1976 Jordan 1997 2002 2004 2015 65 Libya 1966 1969 Morocco since 1963 Oman 1973 1983 Tunisia 1962 1996 2013 Yemen 1973 1994 64 Subsaharan Africa 46 of volunteers serve here 2019 Benin since 1968 Botswana 1966 1997 since 2003 Burkina Faso 1967 1987 1995 2017 66 Burundi 1983 1993 Cabo Verde 1988 2013 Cameroon since 1962 Chad 1966 1979 1987 1998 2003 2006 Comoros 1988 1995 since 2015 Congo 1991 1997 Cote d Ivoire 1962 1981 1990 2003 Central African Republic 1972 1996 Democratic Republic of the Congo 1970 1991 Equatorial Guinea 1988 1993 Eritrea 1995 1998 Eswatini 1969 1996 since 2003 Ethiopia 1962 1977 1995 1999 since 2007 Gabon 1963 1968 1973 2005 Ghana since 1961 Guinea 1963 1966 1969 1971 since 1985 Guinea Bissau 1988 1998 Kenya 1964 2014 since 2020 Lesotho since 1967 Liberia 1962 1990 since 2008 Madagascar since 1993 Malawi 1963 1976 since 1978 Mali 1971 2012 2014 2015 Mauritius 1969 1976 Mauritania 1966 1967 1971 2011 Mozambique since 1998 Namibia since 1990 Niger 1962 2011 Nigeria 1961 1976 1992 1995 Rwanda 1975 1993 since 2008 Sao Tome and Principe 1990 1996 Senegal since 1963 Seychelles 1974 1995 Sierra Leone 1962 1994 2010 2013 since 2016 Somalia 1962 1970 South Africa since 1997 Sudan 1984 1986 Tanzania 1961 1969 since 1979 The Gambia since 1967 Togo since 1962 Uganda 1964 1972 1991 1999 since 2001 Zambia since 1994 Zimbabwe 1991 2001 64 Asia 11 of volunteers serve here 2019 Afghanistan 1962 1979 Bangladesh 1998 2006 Cambodia since 2007 China Under the name U S China friendship volunteers 67 1993 68 2020 69 India 1961 1976 Indonesia 1963 1965 since 2010 Malaysia 1962 1983 Mongolia since 1991 Myanmar since 2016 Nepal 1962 2004 since 2012 Pakistan 1961 1967 1988 1991 Philippines 1961 1990 since 1992 South Korea 1966 1981 Sri Lanka 1962 1964 1967 1970 1983 1998 since 2018 Thailand since 1962 Timor Leste 2002 2006 since 2015 64 Oceania 5 of volunteers serve here 2019 Fiji 1968 1998 since 2003 Cook Islands 1982 1995 Marshall Islands 1966 1996 Solomon Islands 1971 2000 since 2020 Kiribati 1974 2008 Micronesia 1966 2018 Niue 1994 2002 Papua New Guinea 1981 2001 Samoa since 1967 Tonga since 1967 Tuvalu 1977 1997 Vanuatu since 1990 64 Peace Corps activities were suspended and all volunteers worldwide were evacuated on March 15 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic 70 Application and volunteer process Edit Recruitment advert placed in a 1990 issue of State Magazine The application for the Peace Corps takes up to one hour unless one talks to a recruiter The applicant must be at least 18 years old and a U S citizen and according to a 2018 document they should apply 6 to 9 months before they want to leave They must go through an interview 71 Applicants can apply to only one placement every year Placements can be sorted through the Peace Corps six project sectors Agriculture Environment Community Economic Development Health Education and Youth in Development Applicants may also narrow down their application of choice by country they want to serve in various regions of the world Peace Corps volunteers are expected to serve for 2 years in the foreign country with 3 months of training before swearing in to service This occurs in country with host country national trainers in language and assignment skills Prior to 2014 the application process took about a year 72 Initiatives EditThe Peace Corps aims to educate community members on the different illnesses that are present in developing countries as well as what treatments exist in order prevent these illnesses from spreading Volunteers are also often there in order to teach community members about modern agricultural techniques in order for them to more effectively produce food for themselves and each other Peace Corps The Corps is also a proponent of equal education and moves to allow for equal education opportunities for girls in countries like Liberia and Ethiopia In 2015 the organization partnered with United States Agency for International Development USAID to implement First Lady Michelle Obama s Let Girls Learn initiative 73 Eradicating malaria in Africa Edit The Corps launched its initiative to engage volunteers in malaria control efforts in 2011 The initiative which grew out of malaria prevention programs in Peace Corps Senegal now includes volunteers in 24 African countries 74 75 Environment Edit The Corps offers a variety of environmental programs Needs assessments determine which programs apply to each country Programs include effective and efficient forms of farming recycling park management environmental education and developing alternative fuel sources 76 Volunteers must have some combination of academic degrees and practical experience The three major programs are Protected Areas Management Environment Education or Awareness and Forestry In Protected areas management volunteers work with parks or other programs to teach resource conservation Volunteer activities include technical training working with park staff on wildlife preservation organizing community based conservation programs for sustainable use of forests or marine resources and creating activities for raising revenue to protect the environment Environment Education or Awareness focuses on communities that have environmental issues regarding farming and income Programs include teaching in elementary and secondary schools environmental education to youth programs creation of environmental groups support forest and marine resource sustainability ways of generating money urban sanitation management and educating farmers about soil conservation forestry and vegetable gardening 77 Forestry programs help communities conserve natural resources through projects such as soil conservation flood control creation of sustainable fuels agroforestry e g fruit and vegetable production alley cropping and protection of biodiversity 78 Peace Corps Response Edit Peace Corps Response formerly named the Crisis Corps was created by Peace Corps Director Mark Gearan in 1996 79 Gearan modeled the Crisis Corps after the National Peace Corps Association s successful Emergency Response Network ERN of Returned Peace Corps Volunteers willing to respond to crises when needed ERN emerged in response to the 1994 Rwandan genocide 80 On November 19 2007 Peace Corps Director Ronald Tschetter changed Crisis Corps s name to Peace Corps Response 81 The change to Peace Corps Response allowed Peace Corps to include projects that did not rise to the level of a crisis The program deploys former volunteers on high impact assignments that typically range from three to twelve months in duration Peace Corps Response volunteers generally receive the same allowances and benefits as their Peace Corps counterparts including round trip transportation living and readjustment allowances and medical care Minimum qualifications include completion of at least one year of Peace Corps service including training in addition to medical and legal clearances The Crisis Corps title was retained as a unique branch within Peace Corps Response designed for volunteers who are deployed to true crisis situations such as disaster relief following hurricanes earthquakes floods volcanic eruptions and other catastrophes Education and languages Edit Peace Corps has created resources for teachers in the US and abroad to teach 101 languages 82 83 Resources vary by language and include text recordings lesson plans and teaching notes Laws governing the Peace Corps EditExecutive orders Edit Peace Corps was originally established by Executive Order and has been modified by several subsequent executive orders including 1961 Executive Order 10924 Establishment and administration of the Peace Corps in the Department of State Kennedy 84 1962 Executive Order 11041 Continuance and administration of the Peace Corps in the Department of State Kennedy 85 1963 Executive Order 11103 Providing for the appointment of former Peace Corps volunteers to the civilian career services Kennedy 86 1971 Executive Order 11603 Assigning additional functions to the Director of ACTION Nixon 1979 Executive Order 12137 The Peace Corps Carter 87 Laws Edit Federal laws governing the Peace Corps are contained in Title 22 of the United States Code Foreign Relations and Intercourse Chapter 34 The Peace Corps 88 Public laws are passed by Congress and the President and create or modify the U S Code The first public law establishing Peace Corps in the US Code was The Peace Corps Act passed by the 87th Congress and signed into law on September 22 1961 Several public laws have modified the Peace Corps Act including Pub L 87 293 75 Stat 612 enacted September 22 1961 The Peace Corps Act Pub L 88 200 77 Stat 359 enacted December 13 1963 Pub L 89 134 79 Stat 549 enacted August 24 1965 Pub L 89 554 80 Stat 378 enacted September 6 1966 Pub L 89 572 80 Stat 764 enacted September 13 1966 Pub L 91 99 83 Stat 166 enacted October 29 1969 Pub L 91 352 84 Stat 464 enacted July 24 1970 Pub L 94 130 89 Stat 684 enacted November 14 1975 Bill to carry into effect certain provisions of the Patent Cooperation Treaty and for other purposes 89 Pub L 95 331 92 Stat 414 enacted August 2 1978 Peace Corps Act Amendments 90 Pub L 96 465 94 Stat 2071 enacted October 17 1980 The Foreign Service Act of 1980 91 Pub L 97 113 95 Stat 1519 enacted December 29 1981 International Security and Development Cooperation Act of 1981 92 Pub L 99 83 99 Stat 190 enacted August 8 1985 International Security and Development Cooperation Act of 1985 93 Pub L 99 514 100 Stat 2085 enacted October 22 1986 Tax Reform Act of 1986 94 Pub L 102 565 106 Stat 4265 enacted October 28 1992 A bill to amend the Peace Corps Act to authorize appropriations for the Peace Corps for FY1993 and to establish Peace Corps foreign exchange fluctuations account and for other purposes 95 Pub L 105 12 text PDF 111 Stat 23 enacted April 30 1997 The Assisted Suicide Funding Restriction Act of 1997 96 Pub L 106 30 text PDF 113 Stat 55 enacted May 21 1999 Peace Corps Act FY2002 2003 Authorization Bill 97 Peace Corps Reauthorization Act of 2008 at Congress govCode of Federal Regulations Edit The Peace Corps is subject to Federal Regulations as prescribed by public law and executive order and contained in Title 22 of the Code of Federal Regulations under Chapter 3 Limitations on former volunteers Edit Former members of the Peace Corps may not be assigned to military intelligence duties for a period of 4 years following Peace Corps service Furthermore they are forever prohibited from serving in a military intelligence posting to any country in which they volunteered 98 Former members may not apply for employment with the Central Intelligence Agency for a period of 5 years following Peace Corps Service Time limits on employment Edit Peace Corps employees receive time limited appointments and most employees are limited to a maximum of five years of employment This time limit was established to ensure that Peace Corps staff remain fresh and innovative A related rule specifies that former employees cannot be re employed until after the same amount of time that they were employed Volunteer service is not counted for the purposes of either rule 99 Union representation EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Non supervisory domestic employees are represented by the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees AFSCME Local 3548 The Federal Labor Relations Agency certified the Union on May 11 1983 About 500 domestic employees are members The current collective bargaining agreement became effective on April 21 1995 Leadership EditDirectors Edit On January 3 2018 President Donald Trump nominated Josephine Jody Olsen as the 20th director of the Peace Corps 100 Olsen has a long history with the agency serving as Acting Director in 2009 Deputy Director from 2002 to 2009 Chief of Staff from 1989 to 1992 Regional Director North Africa Near East Asia Pacific from 1981 to 1984 and Country Director in Togo from 1979 to 1981 Olsen also served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Tunisia from 1966 to 1968 100 101 She left office on January 20 2021 102 In April 2022 President Biden nominated Carol Spahn as director to succeed Olsen 103 and she was confirmed by the United States Senate on December 13 2022 104 Spahn was acting director from January 20 2021 until November 16 2021 and CEO from November 2021 to November 2022 105 She had previously served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Romania and subsequently returned as Country Director in Malawi then Chief of Operations for Eastern and Southern Africa following a career in the NGO and private sectors The full list of directors is as follows No Image Director Service dates Appointed by Summary of Wikipedia page1 R Sargent Shriver 106 1961 1966 106 Kennedy 106 President Kennedy appointed Shriver three days after signing the executive order 107 Volunteers arrived in five countries during 1961 108 In just under six years Shriver developed programs in 55 countries with more than 14 500 volunteers 107 2 Jack Vaughn 1966 1969 Johnson Vaughn improved marketing programming and volunteer support as large numbers of former volunteers joined the staff He also promoted volunteer assignments in conservation natural resource management and community development 3 Joseph Blatchford 1969 1971 Nixon Blatchford served as head of the new ACTION agency which included the Corps He created the Office of Returned Volunteers to help volunteers serve in their communities at home and initiated New Directions a program emphasizing volunteer skills 4 Kevin O Donnell 1971 1972 Nixon O Donnell s appointment was the first for a former Peace Corps country director Korea 1966 70 He fought budget cuts and believed strongly in a non career Peace Corps 5 Donald Hess 1972 1973 Nixon Hess initiated training of volunteers in the host country where they would eventually serve using host country nationals The training provided more realistic preparation and costs dropped for the agency Hess also sought to end the downsizing of the Peace Corps 6 Nicholas Craw 1973 1974 Nixon Craw sought to increase the number of volunteers in the field and to stabilize the agency s future He introduced a goal setting measurement plan the Country Management Plan which gained increased Congressional support and improved resource allocation across the 69 participating countries 7 John Dellenback 1975 1977 Ford Dellenback improved volunteer health care available He emphasized recruiting generalists He believed in committed applicants even those without specific skills and instead training them for service 8 Carolyn R Payton 1977 1978 Carter Payton was the first female director and the first African American She focused on improving volunteer diversity 9 Richard F Celeste 1979 1981 Carter Celeste focused on the role of women in development and increased women and minority participation particularly for staff positions He invested heavily in training including the development of a worldwide core curriculum 10 Loret Miller Ruppe 1981 1989 Reagan Ruppe was the longest serving director and championed women in development roles She launched the Competitive Enterprise Development program the Caribbean Basin Initiative the Initiative for Central America and the African Food Systems Initiative 11 Paul Coverdell 1989 1991 G H W Bush Coverdell established two programs with a domestic focus World Wise Schools enabled U S students to correspond with overseas volunteers Fellows USA assisted Returned Peace Corps volunteers in pursuing graduate studies while serving local communities 12 Elaine Chao 1991 1992 G H W Bush Chao was the first Asian American director She expanded Peace Corps presence in Eastern Europe and Central Asia by establishing the first Peace Corps programs in Latvia Lithuania Estonia and other newly independent countries 13 Carol Bellamy 1993 1995 Clinton Bellamy was the first RPCV Returned Peace Corps volunteer Guatemala 1963 65 to be director She reinvigorated relations with former volunteers and launched the Corps web site 14 Mark D Gearan 1995 1999 Clinton Gearan established the Crisis Corps a program that allows former volunteers to help overseas communities recover from natural disasters and humanitarian crises He supported expanding the corps and opened new volunteer programs in South Africa Jordan Bangladesh and Mozambique 15 Mark L Schneider 1999 2001 Clinton Schneider was the second RPCV El Salvador 1966 68 to head the agency He launched an initiative to increase volunteers participation in helping prevent the spread of HIV AIDS in Africa and also sought volunteers to work on information technology projects 16 Gaddi Vasquez 2002 2006 G W Bush Gaddi H Vasquez was the first Hispanic American director His focus was to increase volunteer and staff diversity He also led the establishment of a Peace Corps program in Mexico 17 Ron Tschetter September 2006 2008 G W Bush The third RPCV to head the agency Tschetter served in India in the mid 1960s He launched an initiative known as the 50 and Over to increase the participation of older men and women 18 Aaron S Williams August 2009 September 2012 Obama Aaron S Williams became director on August 24 2009 Mr Williams is the fourth director to have served as a volunteer Williams cited personal and family considerations as the reason for his stepping down as Peace Corps Director on September 17 2012 109 19 Carrie Hessler Radelet September 2012 2017 Obama Carrie Hessler Radelet became acting Director of the Peace Corps in September 2012 Previously Hessler Radelet served as deputy director of the Peace Corps from June 23 2010 until her appointment as acting Director 110 From 1981 to 1983 she served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Western Samoa with her husband Steve She was confirmed as Director on June 5 2014 20 Jody Olsen February 2018 January 2021 Trump Jody Olsen was confirmed Director of the Peace Corps on February 27 2018 Olsen previously served the Peace Corps as Acting Director in 2009 Deputy Director from 2002 to 2009 Chief of Staff from 1989 to 1992 Regional Director North Africa Near East Asia Pacific from 1981 to 1984 and Country Director in Togo from 1979 to 1981 Olsen also served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Tunisia from 1966 to 1968 21 Carol Spahn January 2023 present Biden Carol Spahn previously served in acting capacity in this position from January to November 2021 She was then appointed CEO of the Peace Corps and served from November 2021 to November 2022 later being nominated to director in April 2022 Spahn also served as Chief of Operations for Eastern and Southern Africa Country Director for Malawi and a volunteer in Romania Inspector General EditThe Peace Corps Office of Inspector General is authorized by law to review all programs and operations of the Peace Corps citation needed The OIG is an independent entity within the Peace Corps The inspector general IG reports directly to the Peace Corps Director In addition the IG reports to Congress semiannually with data on OIG activities citation needed The OIG serves as the law enforcement arm of the Peace Corps and works closely with the Department of State the Department of Justice and other federal agencies OIG has three sections to conduct its functions Audit Auditors review functional activities of the Peace Corps such as contract compliance and financial and program operations to ensure accountability and to recommend improved levels of economy and efficiency Evaluations Evaluators analyze the management and program operations of the Peace Corps at both overseas posts and domestic offices They identify best practices and recommend program improvements and ways to accomplish Peace Corps mission and strategic goals Investigations Investigators respond to allegations of criminal or administrative wrongdoing by Peace Corps Volunteers Peace Corps personnel including experts and consultants and by those who do business with the Peace Corps including contractors 111 From 2006 to 2007 H David Kotz was the Inspector General 112 Criticism EditCritics and criticisms of Peace Corps include former volunteer and country director Robert L Strauss in Foreign Policy 113 The New York Times 114 The American Interest 115 and elsewhere an article by a former volunteer describing assaults on volunteers from 1992 to 2010 116 an ABC news report on 20 20 117 a Huffington Post article on former Peace Corps volunteers speaking out on rapes 118 and About com s article on rape and assault in the Peace Corps 119 In the Reagan Administration in 1986 an article in the Multinational Monitor looked critically at the Peace Corps 120 On a positive note the writer praises the Corps for aspects saying that it is not in the business of transferring massive economic resources Rather it concentrates on increasing productivity and encouraging self reliance in villages that are often ignored by large scale development agencies and notes the heavy emphasis on basic education by the Corps Many returned volunteers complain that the Peace Corps does little to promote or make use of their rich experiences once they return A Peace Corps volunteer is sent in to relieve the local government from having to develop policies that assure equitable distribution of health care During the early years there were many failures in structure and programming Some critics charge that the Peace Corps is only a somewhat ineffective attempt to counter damage done to the U S image abroad by its aggressive military and its unscrupulous businesses Many observers and some returned volunteers charge that in addition to public relations for the United States Peace Corps programs serve to legitimize dictators When he began evaluating the Corps in the 1960s Charlie Peters found they were training volunteers to be junior diplomats Giving them a course in American studies world affairs and communism Although it seems unlikely that the Peace Corps is used in covert operations wittingly or not it is often used in conjunction with U S military interests In a review of the Peace Corps in March the House Select Committee on Hunger praised the agency for effective work in the areas of agriculture and conservation while recommending that the Corps expand its African Food Systems Initiative increase the number of volunteers in the field recruit more women and move to depoliticize country dictatorships 120 The author suggests that the poor should be encouraged to organize a power base to gain more leverage with the powers that be by the Peace Corps and that The Peace Corps is the epitome of Kennedy s Camelot mythology It is a tall order to expect a small program appended to an immense superpower to make a difference but it is a goal worth striving for In December 2003 a report by the Brookings Institution praised the Peace Corps but proposed changes 121 These include relabeling Peace Corps volunteers in certain countries greater host country ownership reverse volunteers have volunteers from the host country in the U S and multilateral volunteers The Brookings Institution wrote that a one year service commitment for the Baby Boom generation could make the Peace Corps more attractive to older Americans possibly combined with the option of returning to the same site or country after a three month break and customized placement to a specific country would increase the number of people volunteering In a critique by The Future of Freedom Foundation 122 James Bovard mixes history of the Peace Corps with current interpretations He writes that in the 1980s The Peace Corps s world saving pretensions were a joke on American taxpayers and Third World folks who expected real help He goes on to criticize the difference in rhetoric and action of Peace Corps volunteers even attacking its establishment as the epitome of emotionalism in American politics Using snippets of reports accounts of those in countries affected by the Peace Corps and even concluded that at one point some Peace Corps agricultural efforts directly hurt Third World poor At the end of the article Bovard noted that all Peace Corps volunteers he had talked with conceded they have not helped foreigners but he acknowledges that Some Peace Corps volunteers like some Americans who volunteer for religion missions abroad have truly helped foreigners citation needed Sexual assault Edit The Peace Corps has been criticized for failing to properly respond to the sexual violence that many of its female volunteers face 123 BoingBoing editor Xeni Jardin describes criticism of the agency s response to assault A growing number of ex Peace Corps volunteers are speaking out about having survived rape and other forms of sexual assault while assigned overseas They say the agency ignored their concerns for safety or requests for relocation and tried to blame rape victims for their attacks Their stories and support from families and advocates are drawing attention from lawmakers and promises of reform from the agency Among 8 655 volunteers there are on average 22 Peace Corps women who reported being the victims of rape or attempted rape each year 124 125 At a meeting of the House Foreign Affairs Committee in 2011 Peace Corps volunteers shared their experiences of violence and sexual assault At this meeting it was found that between 2000 and 2009 there have been several cases of rape or attempted rape and about 22 women are sexually assaulted each year The case of murdered Peace Corps volunteer Kate Puzey was discussed The Peace Corps has gained attention in the media and their directors have been attacked for how they handled this situation Kate Puzey s mother was one of those to make a comment at the meeting about how badly the situation with her daughter had been handled One woman claimed that her country s director had blamed her for getting raped while other victims have also been similarly blamed 126 Criticism of how Peace Corps has responded to sexual assaults against volunteers culminated in the appointment of Kellie Green as the agency s first Director of the Office Of Victims Advocacy in 2011 Green was eventually pushed out of her position in April 2015 for purportedly creating a hostile work environment Greene maintains that Peace Corps retaliated against her for pressing agency officials to fully comply with their responsibilities towards volunteers who have been victims of sexual assault A Change org petition demanding that Green be reinstated began circulating among former volunteers in December 2015 127 In 2009 the most recent year reported 69 of Peace Corps crime victims were women 88 were under 30 and 82 were Caucasian Worldwide there were 15 cases of rape attempted rape and 96 cases of sexual assault reported for a total of 111 sexual crimes committed against female Peace Corps volunteers The majority of women who join the Peace Corps are in their mid twenties In 62 of the more than 2 900 assault cases since 1990 the victim was identified as being alone In 59 of assault cases the victim was identified as a woman in her 20s 128 In popular culture EditFrank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention have a song named Who Needs the Peace Corps on their 1968 album We re Only in It for the Money In popular culture the Peace Corps has been used as a comedic plot device in such movies as Airplane Christmas with the Kranks Shallow Hal and Volunteers or used to set the scene for a historic era as when Frances Baby Houseman tells the audience she plans to join the Peace Corps in the introduction to the movie Dirty Dancing 129 The Peace Corps has also been documented on film and examined more seriously and in more depth The 2006 documentary film Death of Two Sons directed by Micah Schaffer juxtaposes the deaths of Amadou Diallo a Guinean American who was gunned down by four New York City policemen with 41 bullets and Peace Corps volunteer Jesse Thyne who lived with Amadou s family in Guinea and died in a car crash there 130 Jimi Sir released in 2007 is a documentary portrait of volunteer James Parks experiences as a high school science math and English teacher during the last 10 weeks of his service in Nepal 131 James speaks Nepali fluently and shows a culture where there are no roads vehicles electricity plumbing telephone or radio 131 The movie El Rey directed and written by Antonio Dorado in 2004 attacks corrupt police unscrupulous politicians and half hearted revolutionaries but also depicts the urban legend of Peace Corps Volunteers training native Colombians how to process coca leaves into cocaine 132 In the 1969 film Yawar Mallku Sangre de condor Blood of the Condor Bolivian director Jorge Sanjines portrayed Peace Corps volunteers in the camp as arrogant ethnocentric and narrow minded imperialists out to destroy Indian culture One particularly powerful scene showed Indians attacking a clinic while the volunteers inside sterilized Indian women against their will The film is thought to be at least partially responsible for the expulsion of the Peace Corps from Bolivia in 1971 Peace Corps volunteer Fred Krieger who was serving in Bolivia at the time said It was an effective movie emotionally very arousing and it directly targeted Peace Corps volunteers I thought I would be lynched before getting out of the theatre To my amazement people around me smiled courteously as we left no one commented it was just like any other movie 133 In 2016 Peace Corps partnered with jewelry retailer Alex and Ani to create cord bracelets to raise money for the Peace Corps Let Girls Learn Fund 134 Fictional Peace Corps volunteers Frances Baby Houseman in the 1987 film Dirty Dancing plans to join the Peace Corps after graduating from Mount Holyoke 135 In The Waltons Elizabeth Walton joins the Peace Corps in the TV Movie series In Boy Meets World Jack and Rachel graduate from the fictional Pennbrook University and join the Peace Corps 136 See also EditDocumentary A Towering Task The Story of the Peace Corps List of notable Peace Corps volunteers AmeriCorps Language education List of language self study programs Peace Corps Memorial Provincial Reconstruction Team United States Cultural Exchange Programs British Romanian Educational Exchange CUSO Doctors Without Borders EU Aid Volunteers European Voluntary Service Fredskorpset International Voluntary Services JICA Japan International Cooperation Agency Korea International Cooperation Agency United Nations Volunteers Voluntary Service Overseas World VisionNotes Edit Executive Order 10924References Edit Agency Financial Report FY 2020 PDF PDF Peace Corps Retrieved July 30 2020 75 Stat 612 a b Peace Corps Mission History amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved March 28 2022 MS 281 COMPLETION OF SERVICE DATE ADVANCEMENT AND EXTENSION OF SERVICE PDF Archived from the original PDF on October 15 2011 Retrieved October 16 2011 Peace Corps JFK Library www jfklibrary org Retrieved March 28 2022 Fact Sheet PDF files peacecorps gov September 30 2015 Retrieved April 29 2016 Boyle Kevin November 21 1995 The UAW and the Heyday of American Liberalism 1945 1968 Cornell University Press p 144 ISBN 978 1 5017 1327 9 Reuther Walter 1961 Walter P Reuther Selected Papers Macmillan p 136 Reuther Walter 1961 Walter P Reuther Selected Papers Macmillan p 126 Leamer Laurence 2001 The Kennedy Men 1901 1963 HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 688 16315 0 POINT FOUR HOE ARMY SOUGHT BY M MAHON The New York Times January 26 1952 Retrieved March 19 2012 Humphrey Hubert H 1991 The Education of a Public Man ISBN 9780816618972 Gerber Anna February 27 2015 Tops in Peace Corps Volunteers again SOURCE Colorado State University Retrieved December 10 2015 New Frontiers for American Youth Perspective on the Peace Corps Public Affairs Press 1961 Guide too the Peace Corps Collections Colorado State University Special Collections Retrieved February 22 2015 a b Carew Anthony 1993 Walter Reuther Manchester University Press p 101 Boyle Kevin November 21 1995 The UAW and the Heyday of American Liberalism 1945 1968 Cornell University Press p 142 ISBN 978 1 5017 1327 9 Barnard John June 2005 American Vanguard The United Auto Workers During the Reuther Years 1935 1970 Wayne State University Press p 381 ISBN 978 0 8143 3297 9 Remarks of Senator John F Kennedy Peace Corps November 20 2013 1960 Retrieved August 3 2015 Cosgrove Elliot October 14 2020 As the Peace Corps turns 60 we must revisit its lessons The Forward Archived from the original on October 19 2020 Albertson Maurice L Pauline E Birky and Andrew E Rice 1961 The Peace Corps Final Report Colorado State University Research Foundation Fort Collins January 1961 a b Teaching With Documents Founding Documents of the Peace Corps National Archives and Records Administration a b Megan Gibson Top 10 Things You Didn t Know About the Peace Corps September 22 2011 Time a b James Tobin JFK at the Union The Unknown Story of the Peace Corps Speech National Peace Corps Association University of Michigan The Avalon Project 1997 Inaugural Address of John F Kennedy The Avalon Project at Yale Law School Archived from the original on May 14 2007 Retrieved May 11 2007 June 22 1962 Remarks to Student Volunteers Participating in Operation Crossroads Africa http www presidency ucsb edu ws index php pid 8730 2005 Who Inspired the Creation of the Peace Corps Peace Corps Online Executive Order 10924 Establishment of the Peace Corps 1961 Ourdocuments gov Retrieved October 16 2011 Organization of American Historians Historycooperative org June 1 2000 Archived from the original on June 29 2012 Retrieved October 16 2011 Cotton John W 1975 Par for the Corps A Review of the Literature on Selection Training and Performance of Peace Corps Volunteers PDF ERIC p 8 Lombas Leith L 2021 INDIVIDUALISM IN ACTION AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE LIVED EXPERIENCES OF PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS Thesis University of Colorado p 31 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 25 2013 Retrieved April 25 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link US History The Peace Corps Peace Corps Online Retrieved January 19 2011 Peace Corps Girl Stirs Anger In Nigeria by Alleging Squalor The New York Times October 16 1961 p 10 a b c The infamous Peace Corps postcard Peace Corps Writers 2007 Retrieved May 11 2007 Postcard to Friend Reporting Primitive Living Leads to Protest by Students The New York Times October 16 1961 p 10 RIFT ON PEACE CORPS HEALING IN NIGERIA The New York Times November 7 1961 p 7 David Allen The Peace Corps in US foreign relations and church state politics Historical Journal 58 1 2015 245 273 David S Busch Service Learning The Peace Corps American Higher Education and the Limits of Modernist Ideas of Development and Citizenship History of Education Quarterly 58 4 2018 475 505 Bernstein 1991 pp 259 79 sfn error no target CITEREFBernstein1991 help Gerald T Rice The bold experiment JFK s Peace Corps 1985 Yee Daniel 2005 Jimmy Carter said his mother s service in the Peace Corps as a nurse when she was 70 years old was one of the most glorious experiences of her life Peace Corps Online Retrieved May 11 2007 1 Weiss Philip May 21 2005 Deborah Gardner s death Murder in the Peace Corps Dennis Priven Nymag com Retrieved October 16 2011 Hastings David ed 2004 Geoscientists in the Peace Corps Geotimes August 2004 Microsoft Word Fact Sheet National Service 070408 FINAL doc PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2010 Retrieved January 19 2011 Shapiro T Rees July 14 2014 Peace Corps announces major changes to application process The Washington Post Retrieved June 2 2018 The Obameter Double the Peace Corps Obama promise No 221 PolitiFact Retrieved January 19 2011 Boston AP March 4 2006 Peace Corps eyes recruitment of minorities older Americans peace corps percent Regional News WRGB CBS 6 Albany 42 652579 73 756232 Cbs6albany com Archived from the original on July 17 2011 Retrieved January 19 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link The Technologies of Peace Harvard International Review Hir harvard edu May 2 2007 Archived from the original on April 26 2018 Retrieved January 19 2011 Fast Facts Peace Corps Archived from the original on July 4 2021 Retrieved July 27 2021 United States Selected Population Profile in the United States White alone not Hispanic or Latino 2009 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Retrieved December 13 2010 Stiffman Eden April 8 2011 Peace Corps Under Fire First Response Action Archived from the original on September 6 2013 Retrieved May 10 2011 History Michigan Review Archived from the original on May 18 2011 Retrieved May 10 2011 Sheppard Mike 2011 Violent Crimes Against Peace Corps Volunteers Retrieved June 5 2015 Peace Corps Gang Rape Volunteer Says U S Agency Ignored Warnings ABC News May 10 2011 Retrieved May 10 2011 Peace Corps announces suspension of Volunteer activities evacuations due to COVID 19 Peace Corps March 15 2020 Retrieved April 6 2020 Lawmakers call for unemployment benefits for evacuated Peace Corps volunteers The Hill 2 Apr 2020 2 Updated as changes take place peacecorpswiki org Category Country Peace Corps sorted list that includes all countries served and formerly served Countries Peace Corps Retrieved February 28 2017 Cuerpos de Paz de EE UU se van por la inseguridad in Spanish elsalvador com January 11 2016 Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 7 2016 US Peace Corps cuts Honduras role amid security fears BBC News London BBC December 22 2011 Retrieved December 7 2016 a b c d e f Countries Peace Corps Retrieved December 7 2016 Stout David The U S Peace Corps Has Suspended Operations in Jordan Time Time Inc Retrieved December 7 2016 Peace Corps Burkina Faso Volunteers Evacuated Safely www peacecorps gov Retrieved June 14 2018 Southerl Daniel April 18 1994 Volunteering For China The Washington Post Retrieved January 19 2020 Forney Matt July 16 1993 U S Peace Corps arrives in China UPI Retrieved January 19 2020 Peace Corps to withdraw volunteers from China Axios January 18 2020 Retrieved January 19 2020 Peace Corps announces suspension of Volunteer activities evacuations due to COVID 19 peacecorps gov Peace Corps March 15 2020 Retrieved February 13 2021 One must be 18 years old and a U S Citizen to apply Peacecorps Retrieved October 8 2016 Peace Corps Announces Historic Changes to Application and Selection Process Peacecorps Retrieved October 8 2016 FACT SHEET First Lady Announces New Let Girls Learn Commitment in Liberia whitehouse gov June 27 2016 via National Archives Hessler Radelet Carrie Ziemer Tim April 24 2013 Peace Corps Volunteers Extend Malaria Efforts to Villages and Towns Across Africa Huffington Post Retrieved 2013 05 10 Africa Prevention Focus of Peace Corps World Malaria Day Events AllAfrica com April 26 2013 Retrieved 2013 05 10 Environment What Do Volunteers Do Peace Corps Peacecorps gov Retrieved October 5 2017 Environment Education or Awareness What Do Volunteers Do Peace Corps Peacecorps gov September 30 2010 Archived from the original on January 12 2011 Retrieved January 19 2011 Forestry What Do Volunteers Do Peace Corps Peacecorps gov September 30 2010 Archived from the original on January 12 2011 Retrieved January 19 2011 Peace Corps Hotline Crisis Corps Opportunity to serve again by Melinda Bridges November 1 2002 PDF Archived November 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine Arnold David Helping Rwanda WorldView Spring 1995 Vol 8 No 2 pg 21 Peace Corps Peace Corps Press Release November 19 2007 Peacecorps gov November 19 2007 Archived from the original on August 16 2011 Retrieved October 16 2011 Peace Corps Language Courses www livelingua com Retrieved October 10 2017 Streit Eric The Peace Corps Courses fsi languages yojik eu Retrieved October 10 2017 Peters Gerhard Woolley John T John F Kennedy Executive Order 10924 Establishment and Administration of the Peace Corps in the Department of State March 1 1961 The American Presidency Project University of California Santa Barbara Retrieved October 7 2013 Peters Gerhard Woolley John T John F Kennedy Executive Order 11041 August 6 1962 The American Presidency Project University of California Santa Barbara Retrieved October 7 2013 Executive Orders Archives gov Retrieved January 19 2011 Executive Orders Archives gov Retrieved January 19 2011 22 U S C 2501 2523 Bill Summary amp Status 94th Congress 1975 1976 H R 6334 THOMAS Library of Congress Thomas loc gov November 14 1975 Archived from the original on January 28 2016 Retrieved January 19 2011 Bill Summary amp Status 95th Congress 1977 1978 H R 11877 THOMAS Library of Congress Thomas loc gov August 2 1978 Archived from the original on January 28 2016 Retrieved January 19 2011 Bill Summary amp Status 96th Congress 1979 1980 H R 6790 THOMAS Library of Congress Thomas loc gov October 17 1980 Archived from the original on May 11 2015 Retrieved January 19 2011 Bill Summary amp Status 97th Congress 1981 1982 S 1196 THOMAS Library of Congress Thomas loc gov December 29 1981 Archived from the original on January 28 2016 Retrieved January 19 2011 Bill Summary amp Status 99th Congress 1985 1986 S 960 THOMAS Library of Congress Thomas loc gov August 8 1985 Archived from the original on January 28 2016 Retrieved January 19 2011 Bill Summary amp Status 99th Congress 1985 1986 H R 3838 THOMAS Library of Congress Thomas loc gov October 22 1986 Archived from the original on May 11 2015 Retrieved January 19 2011 Bill Summary amp Status 102nd Congress 1991 1992 S 3309 THOMAS Library of Congress Thomas loc gov October 28 1992 Archived from the original on January 28 2016 Retrieved January 19 2011 http frwebgate access gpo gov cgi bin getdoc cgi dbname 105 cong public laws amp docid f publ12 pdf bare URL PDF http frwebgate access gpo gov cgi bin getdoc cgi dbname 106 cong public laws amp docid f publ030 pdf bare URL PDF Enlisted Assignments and Utilization Management Army Regulation 614 200 PDF Department of the Army February 26 2009 Retrieved August 1 2009 United States Code Browse Titles Page Frwebgate access gpo gov Retrieved January 19 2011 a b President Donald J Trump nominates Jody Olsen to be Director of the Peace Corps www peacecorps gov Retrieved June 14 2018 Director of the Peace Corps Who Is Jody Olsen AllGov Retrieved September 4 2018 www whitehouse gov President Biden Announces Key Nominees The White House April 6 2022 Retrieved April 6 2022 PN1958 Carol Spahn Peace Corps United States Congress Retrieved December 20 2022 New Executive Officer of the Peace Corps Thomas Peng Philippines Peace Corps Worldwide November 28 2022 Retrieved December 20 2022 a b c Sargent Shriver founding director of Peace Corps dies at 95 The Washington Post Retrieved September 4 2018 a b Terms of Service Violation Bloomberg com January 19 2011 Retrieved September 4 2018 John F Kennedy establishes the Peace Corps on this day in 1961 IrishCentral com March 1 2018 Retrieved September 4 2018 Peace Corps Aaron S Williams to Step Down as Peace Corps Director peacecorps gov Archived from the original on May 15 2013 Retrieved September 6 2015 Peace Corps Director peacecorps gov Archived from the original on February 16 2014 Retrieved September 6 2015 Office of the Inspector General Major Functions of OIG Retrieved February 12 2014 H David Kotz Named New Inspector General at SEC SEC U S Securities and Exchange Commission December 5 2007 Retrieved February 10 2013 Think Again The Peace Corps Foreign Policy Retrieved September 6 2015 Strauss Robert L January 9 2008 Opinion Too Many Innocents Abroad Published 2008 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 18 2021 Strauss Robert L January 1 2010 Grow Up The American Interest Retrieved January 18 2021 John Coyne Babbles Crime And The Peace Corps Volunteer Not A Novel peacecorpsworldwide org Archived from the original on September 5 2015 Retrieved September 6 2015 Raped While a Peace Corps Volunteer ABC News May 9 2011 Retrieved September 6 2015 Graves Lucia May 11 2011 Peace Corps Volunteers Speak Out About Rape Violence Huffington Post Lowen Linda Is the Peace Corps Dangerous for Women About com News amp Issues Retrieved September 6 2015 a b The Peace Corps multinationalmonitor org Retrieved September 6 2015 Rieffel Lex December 1 2003 Reconsidering the Peace Corps The Brookings Institution Retrieved September 6 2015 The Forgotten Failures of the Peace Corps fff org April 2011 Retrieved September 6 2015 Mianecki Julie May 11 2011 Peace Corps volunteers tell lawmakers of sexual assault Los Angeles Times Peace Corps Volunteers Speak Out on Rape The New York Times May 10 2011 Peace Corps volunteers speak out against gross mismanagement of sexual assault complaints Boing Boing May 11 2011 Retrieved September 6 2015 Graves Lucia May 11 2011 The Huffington Post Huffington Post Rein Lisa January 11 2016 Peace Corps volunteers petition to reinstate sexual assault victims advocate who was pushed out The Washington Post Retrieved January 13 2016 Lowen Linda Rape Sexual Assault of Women in the Peace Corps Are Women Safe Part 2 Leonard Maltin ed Leonard Maltin s 2009 Movie Guide 2009 pp 56 245 348 568 1499 New York Daily News Disappointed Diallo ma by Nicole Bode November 27 2006 The original link is dead An archival link is available here a b Jimi Sir an American Peace Corps volunteer in Nepal December 18 2004 Jimisir com Archived from the original on March 4 2009 Retrieved October 16 2011 Miami Herald Popular film revives Peace Corps rumors The top movie in Colombia is about the origins of the cocaine trade with an unexpected villain the U S Peace Corps by Steven Dudley November 6 2004 Archive link Amigos de Bolivia y Peru Sacrificial Llama The Expulsion of the Peace Corps from Bolivia in 1971 by James F Siekmeier The original story Archived October 16 2004 at the Wayback Machine is a dead link An archival copy is available here Peace Corps and ALEX AND ANI Team up to Support Girls Education through New Kindred Cord Collection Peace Corps Archived from the original on March 13 2016 Retrieved March 14 2016 Philip C Dimare 2011 Movies in American History An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO p 128 ISBN 9781598842968 see Valerie Stimac Can You Believe These 8 TV Movie Characters Did the Peace Corps 2016 Archived September 27 2016 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading EditBernstein Irving 1991 Promises Kept John F Kennedy s New Frontier pp 259 79 Latham Michael E Modernization as ideology American social science and nation building in the Kennedy era U of North Carolina Press 2000 Online May Gary Passing the Torch and Lighting Fires The Peace Corps in Thomas G Paterson ed Kennedy s Quest for Victory American Foreign Policy 1961 1963 1989 pp 284 316 The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol 365 May 1966 online at JSTOR Contents Foreword J Norman Parmer ix The Peace Corps In Our Past Charles J Wetzel 1 A Discovery Of Commitment Joseph G Colman 12 Selection Of Volunteers Edwin R Henry 21 The Preparation Of Peace Corps Volunteers For Overseas Service Donald R Shea 29 The Beginnings Of Peace Corps Programming George E Carter 46 Volunteers In The Field Great Expectations Neil A Boyer 55 The Peace Corps Volunteer In The Field Community Development Kirby Jones 63 Volunteers In The Field Teaching Arnold Deutchman 72 The Overseas Staff Lewis H Butler 83 The Peace Corps And The Private Sector The Failure Of A Partnership Thomas D Scott 93 The Returning Volunteer Robert Calvert Jr 105 Evaluation And The Question Of Change Meridan Bennett 119 The Future Of The Peace Corps Harris Wofford Oral Communication Approved Peer Reviewed Saul Morgan Del BagnoExternal links EditCzernek Andrew 2012 Summary of studies done of returned Peace Corps volunteers RPCVs Tarnoff Curt April 26 2018 The Peace Corps Current Issues Congressional Research Service In March 2011 the VOA Special English service of the Voice of America broadcast a 15 minute program on the Peace Corps and its 50th anniversary A transcript and MP3 of the program intended for English learners can be found at Peace Corps at 50 Same Mission of Aid Just Smaller Official website Records of the Peace Corps in the National Archives Record Group 490 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peace Corps amp oldid 1150860451, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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