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"Looking for a Few Good Women": Volunteerism as an Interaction in Two Organizations
Tiffany Taylor*,
Christine Mallinson,
and
Katrina Bloch
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: tltaylo2{at}sa.ncsu.edu.
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Abstract |
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A substantial body of research examines volunteerism via surveys of individual volunteers or volunteer
organizations. The authors argue that researchers must expand this conceptualization of volunteering to
include the interactive process between the volunteer and the organization. Using structuration theory as a
guiding framework, the authors examine how volunteers behavior is both shaped by and also affects the
way in which two organizations are structured. In this comparative case study, the authors utilize
participant observation, interviews, and archival analysis to illustrate this interaction in two
organizations, a no-kill cat shelter and a resource organization for women who partner with women. They find
that the character of the labor process, and specifically whether it entails the expenditure of emotional
labor, leads to either burdensome or rewarding volunteer experiences. The authors further underscore the
importance of examining emerging trends in "episodic volunteering" and shifts in nonprofit
organizations toward more bureaucratized business forms.
First published on December 7, 2007, doi:10.1177/0899764007310420
Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly 2008;37:389.
A more recent version of this article appeared on September 1, 2008

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J. L. Brudney and L. C. P. M. Meijs
It Ain't Natural: Toward a New (Natural) Resource Conceptualization for Volunteer Management
Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly,
August 1, 2009;
38(4):
564 - 581.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
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