Homestay
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Homestay (also home stay and home-stay) is a form of hospitality and lodging whereby visitors share a residence with a local of the area (host) to which they are traveling. The length of stay can vary from one night to over a year and can be provided for free (gift economy), in exchange for monetary compensation, in exchange for a stay at the guest's property either simultaneously or at another time (home exchange), or in exchange for housekeeping or work on the host's property (barter economy). Homestays are examples of collaborative consumption and the sharing economy.[1] Homestays are used by travelers; students who study abroad or participate in student exchange programs; and au pairs, who provide child care assistance and light household duties. They can be arranged via certain social networking services, online marketplaces, or academic institutions.[2]
Advantages and disadvantages
Homestays offer several advantages, such as exposure to everyday life in another location, the opportunity to experience local culture and traditions, opportunities for cultural diplomacy, friendship, intercultural competence, and foreign language practice, local advice, and a lower carbon footprint compared to other types of lodging; however, they may have rules and restrictions, such as curfews, facility usage, and work requirements, and may not have the same level of comfort, amenities, and privacy as other types of lodging.[3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
Notable social networking services and online marketplaces for homestay arrangement
Name | Compensation to host | Non-profit? | Year founded | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
9flats | Monetary payment | No | 2010 | 9flats was launched by German internet entrepreneur Stephan Uhrenbacher – founder of Qype, and former head of northern European operations for lastminute.com.[10] It has over 50,000 members and 30,000 hosts in 104 countries.[11] |
Airbnb | Monetary payment | No | 2008 | Founded by Brian Chesky, Joe Gebbia and Nathan Blecharczyk in 2008, Airbnb is one of the largest networks for arranging homestays with over 6 million listings.[12] |
BeWelcome | None | Yes | 2007[13][14] | BeWelcome (BW) is a non-profit, open-source hospitality exchange service accessible via the BeWelcome website or Android app. BeWelcome is operated by BeVolunteer, a nonprofit organization organized as a voluntary association registered in Rennes, Brittany, France, which is composed solely of volunteers. Membership in BeWelcome is motivated by the absence of for-profit pressure, democratic decision making, and a strict privacy policy.[15][16] The site had 180,000 users as of 2021, across 216 countries.[17][18] BeWelcome was formed by members of Hospitality Club who had had a disagreement with its founder.[19][20][21] |
CouchSurfing | None | No | 2004 | Casey Fenton founded CouchSurfing, which offers free accommodation. In 2011, Couchsurfing, previously a non-profit, was turned into a for-profit corporation.[22][23] Couchsurfing is a hospitality exchange service, where guests do not pay for homestays. Members in some developed countries pay a monthly subscription fee.[24]The conversion of the biggest of hospitality exchange service, CouchSurfing, to a for-profit corporation in 2011 was objected to by many of its members.[25] This was an instance of commodification.[26] CouchSurfing had previously been financed by donations and built using volunteer work.[25][27] |
Friendship Force International | None | Yes | 1977 | Presbyterian minister Wayne Smith and U.S. President Jimmy Carter established Friendship Force International, with the mission of improving intercultural relations, cultural diplomacy, friendship, and intercultural competence via organized trips involving homestays. |
Helpx | Farm work / chores | Yes | 2001 | Hosts provide food and lodging in exchange for up to 28 hours work per week. Some hosts will also provide day trips and transport. There is a €20 registration fee.[28] |
HomeExchange.com | Home exchange | No | 2011 | HelpX was founded by Rob Prince, from England. Prince traveled in Australia and New Zealand, where he worked at several locations in exchange for room and board, inspiring him to develop the website.[29] |
Intervac International | Home exchange | No | 1953 | The first home exchange network. Membership costs $115 per year, although there is a free trial period. |
misterb&b | Monetary payment | No | 2014 | Caters to gay men. |
Pasporta Servo | None | Yes | 1974 | Pasporta Servo facilities free lodging for Esperanto speakers and was established from the work of psychologist Rubén Feldman González in Argentina. Access to the service and lodging are free; however, some hosts may request reimbursement of food costs. |
Servas International | None | Yes | 1949 | Servas International is a volunteer-run international nonprofit organization advocating interracial and international peace.[1] People wishing to join SERVAS must supply letters of recommendation and be interviewed to ensure that they understand the purpose and protocol of being a Servas member, whether as a traveller or host. Members pay an annual fee to the organization, which is determined locally by country.[30] |
Snow Leopard Conservancy India Trust | None | Yes | 2003 | Via the Himalayan Homestay Program, people trekking in Ladakh can pay to stay in one of 130 village homes. This brings much-needed additional income to villagers, helping them offset livestock loss by snow leopards. |
ThirdHome | Home exchange | No | 2010 | Focused on luxury homes |
Trustroots | None | Yes | 2014 | In 2014, Trustroots was founded by Kasper Souren and Mikael Korpela in Berlin, Germany.[31][better source needed] Trustroots.org is a non-profit hospitality exchange service featuring “circles” for hitchhikers, cyclists, buskers, train hoppers, vegans and vegetarians, climbers and others.[citation needed][32][33][34][better source needed] In 2020, Trustroots had 44,000 members, from 220 countries.[35][36] |
Warm Showers | None | Yes | 1993 | Warm Showers is a non-profit homestay platform for traveling cyclists. It has over 173,000 members, including 114,000 hosts.[37] Registration requires payment of a one-time $30 registration fee.[38] |
WWOOF | Farm work / chores | Yes | 1971 | WWOOF ("Worldwide Opportunities on Organic Farms") is a network in which food, lodging, and education is provided to guests in exchange for housekeeping and farmworker services.[39] Registration costs $40 per year.[40] |
Workaway | Farm work / chores | Yes | 2002 | Volunteers or "Workawayers", contribute a pre-agreed amount of time per day in exchange for lodging and food provided by their host.[41] |
Hospitality Club (defunct) | None | Unknown | 1992 | Hospex.org was launched online; it later was folded into Hospitality Club,[42] which was created in 2000 by Veit Kühne. |
Traveler's Directory (defunct) | None | Yes | 1965 | John Wilcock set up the Traveler's Directory as a listing of his friends willing to host each other when traveling.[43] In 1988, Joy Lily rescued the organization from imminent shutdown, forming Hospitality Exchange. |
Hospitality exchange services
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Social networking services where hosts do not receive payments are called hospitality exchange services (HospEx).[44][45][46][47] The relationships on hospitality exchange services are shaped by altruism[48][49] and are related to the cyber-utopianism on the Web in its beginnings and to utopia in general.[26][50]
Non-profit hospitality exchange services have offered scientists access to their anonymized data for publication of insights to the benefit of humanity. Before becoming for-profit, CouchSurfing offered four research teams access to its social networking data.[51][52][53][54] In 2015, non-profit hospitality exchange services Bewelcome and Warm Showers also provided their data for public research.[16]
The biggest HospEx platform in 2012, "CouchSurfing appears to fulfil the original utopian promise of the Internet to unite strangers across geographical and cultural divides and to form a global community"[55] CouchSurfing used utopian rhetoric of "better world," "sharing cultures," and of much better access to global flows and networks of all sorts.[56] It was featured as a means to achieve a cosmopolitan utopia.[57] Commodification of CouchSurfing terminated "the existence of a project run as a flourishing commons, a cyber-utopian dream come true; an example of genuine exchange outside and free from the dominant logic of capital, a space highlighting cultural instead of monetary values, understanding instead of commerce. This space still exists, but instead of outside, now within the market."[26] After CouchSurfing became a for-profit corporation in 2011, some members urged others to join BeWelcome.[58][59][60] Many brand ambassadors, who had become volunteers within CouchSurfing left to BeWelcome and other non-profit platforms because of the change in legal status and insufficient management transparency.[61]
See also
References
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- ^ Clarke, Alan (June 2014). "Homestay Lodging: The Next Disruption in Travel". Wired.
- ^ Prasher, Kalyani (January 7, 2016). "7 Reasons To Choose Homestays Over Hotels On Your Travels". HuffPost.
- ^ Green, Molly (January 30, 2016). "How a Homestay Will Make Your Experience Abroad Richer". HuffPost.
- ^ "7 Benefits of Living with a Local Host Family". Go Abroad. October 30, 2013.
- ^ Andres, Elaine (April 25, 2012). "The Pros and Cons of a Homestay Abroad". Go Overseas.
- ^ McDaniel, Kelly; McDaniel, Ryan (January 29, 2016). "Airbnb vs. Hotel: Which is Right For You?". TravelPulse.
- ^ "Experience South America And Find The Perfect Homestay". Forbes. November 18, 2014.
- ^ Rivers, William P. (1998). "Is Being There Enough? The Effects of Homestay Placements on Language Gain During Study Abroad". Foreign Language Annals. 31 (4): 492–500. doi:10.1111/j.1944-9720.1998.tb00594.x.
- ^ Wong, Venus. "These Are The Best Alternatives To Airbnb". Refinery29.
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- ^ "Not-for-profit Couchsurfing becomes a company (with a conscience)". The Guardian. August 26, 2011.
- ^ Tagiew, Rustam; Ignatov, Dmitry I.; Delhibabu, Radhakrishnan (November 2015). "Hospitality Exchange Services as a Source of Spatial and Social Data?". 2015 IEEE International Conference on Data Mining Workshop (ICDMW): 1125–1130. doi:10.1109/ICDMW.2015.239. ISBN 978-1-4673-8493-3. S2CID 8196598.
- ^ Ossewaarde, Marinus; Reijers, Wessel (21 August 2017). "The illusion of the digital commons: 'False consciousness' in online alternative economies". Organization. 24 (5): 609–628. doi:10.1177/1350508417713217. ISSN 1350-5084. S2CID 149344352.
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- ^ "Alternativen zu Hotels und welche Vorzüge sie haben". www.derwesten.de (in German). 21 May 2019.
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- ^ a b DeAmicis, Carmel (10 January 2015). "How Couchsurfing became the Friendster of the sharing economy". GigaOm.
- ^ a b c Schöpf, Simon (2015-01-25). "The Commodification of the Couch: A Dialectical Analysis of Hospitality Exchange Platforms". TripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique. 13 (1): 11–34–11–34. doi:10.31269/triplec.v13i1.480. ISSN 1726-670X.
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- ^ "The adventure of helping out". Positive News. September 21, 2011.
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- ^ Hull, Dana (July 14, 1996). "SERVAS WITH A SMILE". The Washington Post.
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- ^ ПРОСКУРЯКОВ, Евгений (2021-03-20). "Пять вещей, которые вы покупаете, а могли бы получить бесплатно". kp.ru (in Russian).
- ^ "Member Statistics". Warm Showers.
- ^ "User Account". Warm Showers.
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External links
- Media related to Homestays at Wikimedia Commons