Place, belonging and the determinants of volunteering
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In: Voluntary Sector Review, Vol. 9, No. 1, 03.2018, p. 21-38.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Place, belonging and the determinants of volunteering
AU - Dallimore, David
AU - Davis, Howard
AU - Eichsteller, Marta
AU - Mann, Robin
PY - 2018/3
Y1 - 2018/3
N2 - In this paper we discuss findings from our ethnography examining how volunteering in local associational life is changing, asking whether structural factors fixed in localities remain important, or whether as others have suggested, volunteering is becoming disembedded from place.Across two locations we observe how situational variables including belonging, identification and interaction remain important determinants of volunteering, and how the relationship between people and their localities has distinct meanings. In one locality, people participated as volunteers because they had a strong sense of belonging, in the other, they often volunteered because they wanted to belong. We conclude that local voluntary association is important in forming bridges between people in ‘places’ and wider society, but find that differing notions of belonging mean that localities are not equally situated to operate as effective conduits. We conclude that understanding these dynamics is important for external agencies in planning local public service delivery.
AB - In this paper we discuss findings from our ethnography examining how volunteering in local associational life is changing, asking whether structural factors fixed in localities remain important, or whether as others have suggested, volunteering is becoming disembedded from place.Across two locations we observe how situational variables including belonging, identification and interaction remain important determinants of volunteering, and how the relationship between people and their localities has distinct meanings. In one locality, people participated as volunteers because they had a strong sense of belonging, in the other, they often volunteered because they wanted to belong. We conclude that local voluntary association is important in forming bridges between people in ‘places’ and wider society, but find that differing notions of belonging mean that localities are not equally situated to operate as effective conduits. We conclude that understanding these dynamics is important for external agencies in planning local public service delivery.
KW - volunteering
KW - civil society
KW - participation
KW - belonging
KW - biographical
KW - association
U2 - 10.1332/204080518X15161941913849
DO - 10.1332/204080518X15161941913849
M3 - Article
VL - 9
SP - 21
EP - 38
JO - Voluntary Sector Review
JF - Voluntary Sector Review
SN - 2040-8056
IS - 1
ER -