VSO was founded in 1958 by Alec and Mora Dickson through a bishop's letter to the London paper,
The Sunday Times, as an educational experience overseas for school-leavers, initially only male, before starting university. Volunteers offered unskilled help in return for basic accommodation and pocket money. In 1962, the practice changed to using university graduate volunteers. By 1980, the unskilled volunteers had been completely phased out and the length of service had been extended to two years. Active volunteer numbers initially dropped to about 750, but by 2003 had returned to about 1,400. Since December 2004, applications to volunteer have been accepted from those between ages 20 and 75, who also must have at least two years' experience in their field. In the early 1990s, in order to meet growing demand for highly specialised and skilled volunteers from its partners in developing countries, VSO established partner agencies in
Canada, the
Netherlands,
Kenya/
Uganda (VSO Jitolee), and the
Philippines (VSO Bahaginan). In 2004, VSO launched a partnership called (iVO) in India with , an existing volunteering program of
MITRA, an Indian NGO. VSO's structure evolved to become an international federation which now includes
Ireland,
China and
India as well as the above named countries. International volunteers are recruited through all of these bases, and they can be placed in any one of VSO's programmes (e.g. an Irish volunteer working in
Nepal, or a Ugandan volunteer working in
Tajikistan). From 2011, VSO led a consortium to deliver the UK government's
International Citizen Service programme that provides international volunteer placements for 18- to 25-year-olds. The programme, funded by the Department for International Development (
DFID), now includes
Raleigh International and
Restless Development. In 2016/17, 3,090 young people volunteered through the International Citizen Service programme. In 2017, VSO was awarded a grant of £50 million from the UK's Department of International Development (DFID) for a program called "Volunteering for Development". The three-year initiative aims to improve quality and access to health and education services as well as livelihood opportunities for the most poor and vulnerable, and targets more than 2 million of the poorest and most marginalised people across the globe. The grant supports VSO's vision to enhance effectiveness across a number of vital areas - including in VSO's "core approaches" of social inclusion and gender, social accountability, and resilience. During its first year the project successfully placed 606 international volunteers and 920 national volunteers across VSO's four areas of focus. ==Today==