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Title: The Role of Religiosity for Formal and Informal Volunteering in the Netherlands
Author(s): Tienen, M. van (298983907)
Scheepers, P.L.H. (072162090)
Reitsma, J. (298970716)
Schilderman, J.B.A.M. (123443318)
Publication year: 2011
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: Voluntas : International Journal of Voluntary and non-profit organizations
ISSN: 0957-8765
Volume: vol. 22
Issue: iss. 3
Start page: p. 365
End page: p. 389
Related link(s): http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11266%2D010%2D9160%2D6
Abstract: This paper deals with the question: To what extent do individual religious characteristics, in addition to collective religious characteristics, contribute to the explanation of formal and informal volunteering in the Netherlands at the beginning of the 21st century? To answer this research question, we used the SOCON 2005-2006 dataset. Our main finding concerns informal volunteering: we found that spirituality increases the likelihood of informal volunteering, implying that openness to other people's needs increases the likelihood of the actual provision of help. There are no other aspects of religiosity that are related to informal volunteering. With regard to formal volunteering we found that, in line with previous research, religious attendance is related positively to formal volunteering, religious as well as secular volunteering, which can be regarded as support for the proposition that religious involvement is important for norm conformity. Further, having a more religious worldview decreases the likelihood of formal volunteering which might show that those with a strong religious worldview are more concerned with the 'otherworldly' and less so with what they do in this world. We found no influence of individual religious characteristics on formal volunteering. These results confirm the idea that integration into a religious community plays quite a large role in explaining formal volunteering. Informal volunteering, however, seems to be independent of social networks: it rather depends on individual motivation.
Subject: Secularization, fragmentation and stratification
Organization: SW OW MAW [owi]
SW OZ NISCO SOC
FSW_Fac. algemeen
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/99781

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