This commentary reflects how well-intentioned Western interventions in global orphan care often perpetuate cycles of trauma, family separation, and systemic harm. Drawing on personal experience as a former foster youth and on field observations abroad, these reflections are grounded in dialogue with research on neuroscience, child development, and social policy. The discussion critiques donor-driven aid models, institutional care practices, and rescue-centered theologies that, despite sincere intentions, disrupt children’s development and sever vital family bonds.
Particular attention is given to how institutionalization and voluntourism contribute to an entrenched “orphan economy” that privileges donor narratives over child welfare and sustains poverty-based family separation. In response, this commentary calls on both faith-based and secular humanitarian actors to adopt trauma-informed, family-preserving, and economically empowering approaches. Grounded in ethical imperatives from human rights and theological reflection, it argues for a systemic shift away from rescue-oriented frameworks toward collaborative, culturally respectful strategies that uphold the dignity and relational needs of vulnerable children. The contribution aims to advance scholarly and practitioner dialogue on reforming global orphan care to align humanitarian action with long-term healing and justice.
