The public service-motivated volunteer devoting time or effort: a review and research agenda
The public service-motivated volunteer devoting time or effort: a review and research agenda
The purpose of this conceptual article is to further our understanding of how evolving volunteer trends impact on volunteering intensity. The aim is to provide clarity by applying to the volunteer literature a theoretical framework that can be adapted to different ways in which people volunteer and thus may inform subsequent empirical work. First, we address academic debates concerning
the measurement of volunteer effort. Second, we propose using public service motivation (PSM) theory as a means to understand the motivation of volunteers across sectors. We suggest that different PSM dimensions may be more dominant in certain volunteer settings than others and incorporate person–organisation fit as a means to understand the relationship between PSM and
volunteering intensity. Finally, this article proposes directions for future research.
299–317
Costello, Joyce
48382c11-b9a9-48c2-b8d1-2f1fcae6ffca
Homberg, Fabian
31042a5c-cd37-46a1-bdde-53abb55f1072
Secchi, Davide
e5ffbb34-fda0-4931-9f8f-b806c5aaae0a
1 November 2017
Costello, Joyce
48382c11-b9a9-48c2-b8d1-2f1fcae6ffca
Homberg, Fabian
31042a5c-cd37-46a1-bdde-53abb55f1072
Secchi, Davide
e5ffbb34-fda0-4931-9f8f-b806c5aaae0a
Costello, Joyce, Homberg, Fabian and Secchi, Davide
(2017)
The public service-motivated volunteer devoting time or effort: a review and research agenda.
Voluntary Sector Review, 8 (3), .
(doi:10.1332/204080517X14993297654383).
Abstract
The purpose of this conceptual article is to further our understanding of how evolving volunteer trends impact on volunteering intensity. The aim is to provide clarity by applying to the volunteer literature a theoretical framework that can be adapted to different ways in which people volunteer and thus may inform subsequent empirical work. First, we address academic debates concerning
the measurement of volunteer effort. Second, we propose using public service motivation (PSM) theory as a means to understand the motivation of volunteers across sectors. We suggest that different PSM dimensions may be more dominant in certain volunteer settings than others and incorporate person–organisation fit as a means to understand the relationship between PSM and
volunteering intensity. Finally, this article proposes directions for future research.
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Accepted/In Press date: 10 July 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 November 2017
Published date: 1 November 2017
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 416584
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/416584
ISSN: 2040-8056
PURE UUID: 0504c35e-ae56-4634-8b45-c69b82709cd6
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Date deposited: 03 Jan 2018 17:30
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 17:39
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Author:
Joyce Costello
Author:
Fabian Homberg
Author:
Davide Secchi
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