John Mohan
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COVID-19 and voluntary action
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The COVID-19 pandemic prompted economic and social dislocation in a manner unprecedented in recent history. It was also associated with an upsurge in engagement in volunteering. However, the extent to which that upsurge has been sustained is questionable and this chapter reviews the best available evidence on this topic. First, there are large-scale national surveys of individuals, which enable us to consider whether there was an aggregate change, whether it was sustained and whether those involved were new to volunteering. Second, there are organisation-level data from the returns of voluntary organisations to regulators. Third, was COVID-19 associated with a switch in the character of volunteering, from formal volunteering in organisational settings to informal volunteering of a direct, interpersonal kind, characterised in some quarters as a resurgence of mutual aid? Finally, there are longitudinal studies of individuals, which enable tracking of whether individuals involved in Covid-related volunteering were new to the activity or not, and whether or not they sustained their involvement after the immediate first waves of the pandemic. Within a long-term context of steady decline in volunteering, the effects of COVID-19 do not seem to have been the promotion of a generalised increase in engagement. Rather, the socioeconomic characteristics of those most likely to be involved remain similar to those revealed by extensive previous research on volunteering.

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Volunteering in the United Kingdom

The spirit of service

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