Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
Fiction
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts115/v4/fe/1e/df/fe1edf5d-dff6-c2d2-c6b2-c9cb6aa31bb9/mza_16098590881530492338.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Ethos of Aid
Kimber Vradenburg
10 episodes
1 day ago
Hi, my name is Kimber Vradenburg, and I've been a humanitarian practitioner for over 20 years. I love this work, because it continually asks me to reflect, grow, give the best of myself and live in my integrity. Specifically, I love working with practitioners in the field serving their own communities. They are the people upon whom every humanitarian effort depends. They are also systemically undervalued. Over two decades I’ve worked with these incredible practitioners, meeting as people with as much to learn from one another as to give recipients of aid, honouring each context for its unique labyrinth of beliefs, values, social, cultural and religious norms, histories and systems, while being of service together. This is our way. This is our way of being and doing this beautifully complex and deeply personal work. The ethos of aid. This podcast is a space to share narratives, amplify the voices of field practitioners, continue the juicy dialogue, and our collective growth about how best to serve recipients of aid. Whether you’re a practitioner or outside the sector entirely, you’ll benefit from the perspectives. Episodes will release every Friday; either solo or with guests and you’ll find us everywhere you access podcasts, including Apple, Spotify, Google and Amazon. If you have a comment or a question, or you'd like to be a guest or subscribe, please do so at kimbervradenburg.com, or @kimbervradenburg on Instagram or on the Ethos of Aid FB Page. I’m excited! Welcome, and thank you for listening!
Show more...
Relationships
Society & Culture
RSS
All content for Ethos of Aid is the property of Kimber Vradenburg and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Hi, my name is Kimber Vradenburg, and I've been a humanitarian practitioner for over 20 years. I love this work, because it continually asks me to reflect, grow, give the best of myself and live in my integrity. Specifically, I love working with practitioners in the field serving their own communities. They are the people upon whom every humanitarian effort depends. They are also systemically undervalued. Over two decades I’ve worked with these incredible practitioners, meeting as people with as much to learn from one another as to give recipients of aid, honouring each context for its unique labyrinth of beliefs, values, social, cultural and religious norms, histories and systems, while being of service together. This is our way. This is our way of being and doing this beautifully complex and deeply personal work. The ethos of aid. This podcast is a space to share narratives, amplify the voices of field practitioners, continue the juicy dialogue, and our collective growth about how best to serve recipients of aid. Whether you’re a practitioner or outside the sector entirely, you’ll benefit from the perspectives. Episodes will release every Friday; either solo or with guests and you’ll find us everywhere you access podcasts, including Apple, Spotify, Google and Amazon. If you have a comment or a question, or you'd like to be a guest or subscribe, please do so at kimbervradenburg.com, or @kimbervradenburg on Instagram or on the Ethos of Aid FB Page. I’m excited! Welcome, and thank you for listening!
Show more...
Relationships
Society & Culture
https://d3t3ozftmdmh3i.cloudfront.net/staging/podcast_uploaded_episode/40325355/0a0e16f00ec973ff.jpeg
The Veneer of Beliefs & The Prevalence of Resilience
Ethos of Aid
22 minutes 57 seconds
4 years ago
The Veneer of Beliefs & The Prevalence of Resilience

In this episode, we explore the veneer of beliefs and the prevalence of resilience by looking back through the contexts we’ve discussed so far, from Ghana to Ethiopia, and bringing in a narrative from Rwanda to underline some of the key themes. 

This is the 5th episode, which I cheekily equate with the tricky 3rd album in music-industry-metaphor... It’s a moment to pause and reflect and to recap, before we bring Julius Kwami Tsatsu back next week for the final chapter of our dialogue.

In the first segment you’ll hear me bring in examples from my dialogue with Julius to highlight the importance of trust, relationship and congruence, between beliefs, values and ethics held by practitioners and the communities we’re serving, as well as, the veneer that occurs when we don’t create space for practitioners to integrate external concepts with cultural beliefs, values and social norms. 

In the next segment I narrate a professional experience in Rwanda, that highlights the impacts of the veneer of beliefs, the ways to crack through and the resilience that is revealed when we do. 

Finally, I tie it up in the last segment and underline resilience. A lot!

You can find us anywhere you access podcasts, from Apple to Google to Spotify... And I’d love to hear from you, so please reach out at www.kimbervradenburg.comor @kimbervradenburg on Instagram or on the Ethos of Aid Facebook page or in the group. I’ll be sure to go set up those group rules asap!

Enjoy!

Ethos of Aid
Hi, my name is Kimber Vradenburg, and I've been a humanitarian practitioner for over 20 years. I love this work, because it continually asks me to reflect, grow, give the best of myself and live in my integrity. Specifically, I love working with practitioners in the field serving their own communities. They are the people upon whom every humanitarian effort depends. They are also systemically undervalued. Over two decades I’ve worked with these incredible practitioners, meeting as people with as much to learn from one another as to give recipients of aid, honouring each context for its unique labyrinth of beliefs, values, social, cultural and religious norms, histories and systems, while being of service together. This is our way. This is our way of being and doing this beautifully complex and deeply personal work. The ethos of aid. This podcast is a space to share narratives, amplify the voices of field practitioners, continue the juicy dialogue, and our collective growth about how best to serve recipients of aid. Whether you’re a practitioner or outside the sector entirely, you’ll benefit from the perspectives. Episodes will release every Friday; either solo or with guests and you’ll find us everywhere you access podcasts, including Apple, Spotify, Google and Amazon. If you have a comment or a question, or you'd like to be a guest or subscribe, please do so at kimbervradenburg.com, or @kimbervradenburg on Instagram or on the Ethos of Aid FB Page. I’m excited! Welcome, and thank you for listening!