“…Emerging in the United States during the late 19th century, the concept has been understood as a duty asserted by White people to manage the affairs of non‐White people; it has been used to justify colonization—specifically, its civilizing mission (Bandyopadhyay, 2019). ‘Civilizing’ efforts fundamental to the White Man's Burden are now critiqued within contemporary ID work and attention is paid to discourses and practices that reproduce western standards for development (Bowden, 2009; Donnelley, 1998; Pailey, 2019; Xypolia, 2022). Although ID, like colonialism, has been historically conceptualized as a masculine space (Xypolia, 2022), women are increasingly and now disproportionately engaged in fundraising for, working in and caring about ID (Budabin & Hudson, 2020; Heron, 2007) and in volunteer tourism endeavours (Bandyopadhyay, 2019; Kipp et al, 2021).…”