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Volunteering in the United Kingdom
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24 December 2024

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Volunteer Work, Sociology: work and labour, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Children's Studies, Social and ethical issues
'Volunteering is so important to our society but is so often misunderstood and misinterpreted. John Mohan brings together all the evidence we have in a compelling way to tell the real story of UK volunteering and does a great service to academia, charities, policy makers and government. It's a book that has been needed for a long time.'
Dan Corry, Chief Executive, New Philanthropy Capital
'This long overdue analysis is a welcome contribution to our understanding of the scope and impact of volunteering. Based upon a wide-ranging review of post-war trends, policies and practice, this thought-provoking critical analysis challenges widely held views on volunteering. It ultimately questions why policy makers and practitioners alike are interested in volunteering – and provides insights into how we might support it in the future. Volunteering shouldn’t be taken for granted – and this analysis should inform volunteering policy and practice over the coming decade.'
Karl Wilding, University of Kent
‘Volunteering is as old as time - both universal and politically highly contested. In this insightful panoramic view, John Mohan skilfully both interrogates the debate about volunteering and at the same time promotes its real and eternal value.’
Julia Unwin, Chair of Civil Society Futures Inquiry 2017-19
'This wide-ranging review of the data on volunteering will be valuable for anyone with an interest in this topic. For those working with and leading volunteers, it offers an accessible route into engaging with the breadth of academic data on volunteering, and to understanding the changing policy context within which it has been operating in recent years.'
Helen Timbrell, Centre for Charity Effectiveness
'In this fascinating book, John Mohan undertakes an insightful and carefully researched synthesis of the evidence on volunteering in the UK, examining large-scale survey data from a range of sources, and engages the reader in thinking about participation and trends in engagement in detail, at policy and practice levels. He contextualises trends in volunteering against broader macro-level shifts in the political, social, and economic landscape of the UK since Beveridge’s report Voluntary action: a report on methods of social advance was published (published in October 1948), focusing, in particular, on the last thirty years.'
Sharon Clancy, International Journal of Lifelong Education
'...There is a current of wider social commentary running throughout the book with a focus not just on the position of volunteering in society but also on what the state of volunteering might actually tell us about society. This returns on several occasions to the key point that volunteering does not exist in isolation to wider socio-economic conditions that enable or constrain the ability of people to choose what to do with their time.'
Daniel Haslam, Voluntas
Introduction
Part I Frameworks
1 Concepts and definitions: hunting Snarks and ‘mapping volunteerland’
2 Trends in voluntary action
Part II Contours
Introduction to Part II
3 Diversity and inequality in voluntary action
4 Core and periphery
5 Community-level variations in voluntary action: places don’t volunteer, people do
6 Circumstances, habits and trajectories: journeys into and through volunteering
Part III Impacts
Introduction to Part III
7 Do not expect miracles: the impacts of voluntary action
8 Volunteering, employability and policy
9 Volunteering, health and well-being
10 Volunteering and civic engagement
Part IV Changing contexts
Introduction to Part IV
11 Demographic change, economic circumstances and attitudes to volunteering
12 Cultivating and conserving the spirit of service
13 COVID-19 and voluntary action
Conclusions: Beveridge and the spirit of service
References
Index