John Mohan
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Core and periphery
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The UK has a relatively high and stable rate of engagement in volunteering, but most analyses focus on the rate of engagement, while little has been said about the level of actual effort or contribution made (money donated, hours of volunteering undertaken) or about the overlaps between those aspects of prosocial behaviours. This chapter illustrates the distribution of voluntary effort across the population and identifies a ‘core’ of individuals who make the largest contributions. Complementing this, there is also a discussion of what evidence there is for total non-engagement. Just as the likelihood of engagement in volunteering is socio-economically stratified, there is also evidence of social gradients in levels of engagement; prosperous, educated and employed individuals are not only more likely to volunteer or donate money but they are also likely to contribute more to the collective effort. The analysis considers the characteristics and distribution of primary contributors to formal and informal volunteering and charitable giving, separately and in combination. The converse of a core is a periphery, so for a complete contrast, the second part of the chapter flips the narrative and concentrates on the extent to which there is evidence of no engagement in these behaviours whatsoever. This section draws on longitudinal qualitative and quantitative datasets which allow researchers to reconstruct the volunteering trajectories of individuals for significant parts of their lives. As with investigations into other aspects of volunteering, what we find depends on where we look: there is less to non-engagement than appears at first sight.

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Volunteering in the United Kingdom

The spirit of service

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