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Many Global Charities Refrain From ‘Poverty Porn’ Imagery to Raise Money, but Stereotypes Still Distort Their Pictures

By  Abhishek Bhati
December 13, 2021
Charity fundraising materials often include stereotypical images of life in low-income countries.
Getty Images

This Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The Big Idea

International nongovernmental organizations, often called NGOs, and other charities often use photos that distort the everyday realities of the people in low-income countries they seek to help despite decades of pressure to stop doing that.

That’s what I found when I studied 320 photos that 32 of the largest of these global charities operating in the U.S. used in March 2017 for fundraising.

A big concern is that nearly all the women pictured appear to be single, suggesting that no one who is married could deserve charitable support from afar. This imagery also implies that men in developing countries, who are generally people of color, do not take care of their families.

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This Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The Big Idea

International nongovernmental organizations, often called NGOs, and other charities often use photos that distort the everyday realities of the people in low-income countries they seek to help despite decades of pressure to stop doing that.

That’s what I found when I studied 320 photos that 32 of the largest of these global charities operating in the United States used in March 2017 for fundraising.

A big concern is that nearly all the women pictured appear to be single, suggesting that no one who is married could deserve charitable support from afar. This imagery also implies that men in developing countries, who are generally people of color, do not take care of their families.

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About half of the photos included only children, with girls overrepresented, with no adults pictured — giving the impression that they might have been abandoned. Another one in four featured mothers with infants and other young children — and no men. In addition, 7.5 percent of images were of women with no men or children around. Only 4 percent included what appeared to be two parents belonging to the same family,

I found that NGOs tended to blur the background in these photographs and that the images heavily emphasized the eyes of children, especially of girls, who were usually looking at the ground. This facial expression and body language, as the sociologist Jan Nederveen Pieterse argues, can imply a sense of subservience toward the intended audience: potential donors in the United States and other high-income countries.

I also observed that nearly 25 percent of these fundraising photos featured women who were feeding their infants or visibly taking care of their children. This practice can suggest that no women in developing countries work outside their homes and their primary job is to take care of their children.

These fundraising images were used on Facebook by the 32 largest NGOs doing charitable work in low-income countries.

Why It Matters

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What may be a sincere effort to elicit sympathy distorts the reality of everyday life in developing countries.

Critics of this kind of imagery call it “poverty porn.” In their view, charities select photos that make beneficiaries of charity appear to deserve pity, exploiting them to solicit funds from donors. I believe the main reason many charities still portray people in low-income countries this way is due to their acceptance of stereotypes about the people in low-income countries. It can reflect a failure to understand the complicated issues that contribute to poverty, such as lacking access to an education.

Many of these organizations, including Oxfam, Amnesty International and Christian Aid, are trying to use what they call more “ethical” imagery.

In the past, poor children were often shown crying or appeared to be visibly suffering from malnutrition. In my research, I found that photos of happy, smiling children and other more positive images are becoming much more common in these fundraising materials.

Save the Children, a nonprofit seeking to improve child health, education, and protection in low-income countries, is another example. It updated its guidelines in 2017 to ensure the informed consent and dignity of the beneficiaries. However, the charity still uses some images that stereotype its beneficiaries to evoke pity and raise funds.

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What Still Isn’t Known

As prospective donors see more of these stereotypical images in fundraising appeals, do they become more biased against those living in poverty who they are being asked to help? Further research is needed to determine if that is the case.

Editor’s note: This article is part of a partnership the Chronicle has forged with the Conversation to expand coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits. The three organizations receive support for this work from the Lilly Endowment. This article is republished from the Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

We welcome your thoughts and questions about this article. Please email the editors or submit a letter for publication.
Diversity, Equity, and InclusionFundraising from Individuals
Abhishek Bhati
Abhishek Bhati is an assistant professor of political science at Bowling Green State University
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