This presentation was part of the ARVAC Annual lecture held on the 29th May 2014.
The presentation was by Nick Ockenden, NCVO and looks at what the current opportunities and challenges for volunteering.
Find out more about the Institute of Volunteering Research http://www.ivr.org.uk/
3. What are we talking about?
• A commonly accepted working definition:
[Volunteering is] ‘an activity that involves spending time, unpaid, doing something
that aims to benefit the environment or individuals or groups other than (or in
addition to) close relatives’
(The Volunteering Compact Code of Good Practice, 2005)
• Three defining principles
•Unpaid
•Freely given
•For the benefit of others or the environment
4. When is volunteering not volunteering?
• Volunteers cannot receive a salary
• Some receive a regular allowance (‘voluntary workers’)
• Some forms of reward may have financial value (but also good
practice)
• Some volunteers allowed paid time off work to volunteer
• Volunteering needs to a free choice
• ‘Mandated volunteering’ – parts of some education courses
• Some cases of individuals being told to volunteer in order to comply
with job seekers or Work Programme agreements
• Expectation to volunteer in some employer-supported volunteering
schemes
5. How much is taking place?
(Data from Citizenship Survey (2001 – 2010-11) and Community Life Survey (2012-13).
Respondents for each period range from 6,915 - 9,664)
Highest rate
44%
Only varies
by 5%
9. What’s happening to volunteering infrastructure?
• Continued decline in the mean average income of Volunteer
Centres
• £100,028 in 2011-12, a fall of over £34,000 from previous year
• 63% of Volunteer Centres experienced a cut in funding in
2011-12 compared to 2010-11
• 40% had a fall in funding of 25% or more
• Received an average of 1,086 volunteering enquiries
(IVR’s 2011-12 Annual Return of Volunteer Centres)
10. And volunteer management?
• Volunteer management often ‘added-on’ to existing jobs and
seen as being under-valued
• Over one-third of volunteer managers are unpaid
• Organisations have difficulty in recruiting enough volunteers
(55%)
• …and in recruiting volunteers with the right skills (57%)
• Challenges tend to be more pronounced amongst smaller
organisations (‘below the radar’)
11. Formalisation of volunteering is good and bad
• Volunteers seem to be happier about way their volunteering is
being organised
• 2007 – 31% said volunteering could be much better organised
(Helping Out, 2007)
• 1997 – 71% (National Survey of Volunteering, 1997)
• But…some changes for the worse
• 27% feel there is too much bureaucracy (Helping Out, 2007)
• Volunteering becoming more ‘work-like’
• Recruiting volunteers with specific skills
• Less space for volunteers with experiential learning
• Do we risk losing the ‘spirit of volunteering’?
12. Volunteering and public services
• Long history of effective involvement…but changing
• Continued cuts in funding
• Calls for citizens to become more involved – localism, co-production,
partnership delivery
• Involvement is a spectrum: supporting running services to
leading their delivery
• Opportunities and challenges
• More democratic, accountable services or the state absolving
responsibility?
• Bottom-up community empowerment or top-down agenda?
• Volunteers as added-value or replacing paid jobs?
• Increased responsibility or an unnecessary burden?
13. What does this all mean for volunteering?
• More will be asked of volunteers and volunteering
• Is there a limit to what they can or should do?
• New policies, socio-economic developments, and
programmes will test the boundaries of volunteering
• How do we protect the underpinning principles of volunteering?
• The challenging economic climate will not go away
• How do we put into practice the principle of ‘freely given but not cost
free’?
• Interest in increasing rates of volunteering will continue
• How do we promote quality and access as well?
Notas do Editor
Technology
New forms of engagement
Demographics
An ageing population
Changing public services
Volunteers in new roles
Job replacement
Economic challenges
Being asked to do more for less
Volunteers managing other volunteers
Recent increase in the number of people volunteering
At least once a year: 44% (2012-13); 39% (2010-11)
At least once a month: 29% and 25%
Return to the 2005 ‘high’
The key message is stability of rates since 2001 and its resilience
Can or should it increase any further?
The idea of the ‘civic core’
Just over one-third of the population provides nearly 90% of the volunteer hours
And just over 80% of the amount given to charity
And 77% of participation in different civic associations
More likely to be highly educated, in professional and managerial occupations, middle-aged, have lived in their area for more than 10 years, and practicing religion
Live in the least deprived areas of the country
What about less formalised, community-based volunteering?