谁是难民和移民非营利组织的志愿者?两项研究的结果

IF 2.2 Q2 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION Nonprofit Policy Forum Pub Date : 2024-06-13 DOI:10.1515/npf-2023-0066
Anna Ferris, Tiana Marrese, Ram A. Cnaan, Daniel Choi, F. Handy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要 难民和移民非营利组织依靠志愿者提供服务,这对支持其使命至关重要。本文的主要目的是探讨支持难民和移民非营利组织的志愿者类型。我们报告了两项独立但互补的研究结果。研究 1 考察了在 COVID-19 大流行之前和期间在难民和移民非营利组织中正式提供志愿服务的个人。在分析中,我们采用了逻辑回归法,以了解在难民和移民组织中提供志愿服务在多大程度上与人口特征、宗教信仰、政治观点和公民参与有关。我们将援助难民和移民的志愿者与服务于其他事业的志愿者以及所有在美国从事志愿服务的个人进行了比较。在研究 2 中,我们旨在更深入地了解为难民和移民提供志愿服务的个人,并对在 2021 年 8 月至 2022 年 8 月期间通过难民安置组织或社区赞助团体为阿富汗疏散人员提供支持的志愿者进行了 15 次深入的半结构式访谈。研究 1 的结果表明,与服务于其他组织的志愿者相比,支持难民和移民的志愿者更有可能是兼职工作者,出生在美国之外,政治观点更自由,更有可能信教。研究 2 的结果显示,为难民和移民事业提供志愿服务的志愿者并不是新手,他们的动机通常来自于个人或家庭的移民或流离失所经历,并且隶属于某个教会或犹太教堂。志愿者们表现出,他们超越了传统的以提供即时需求为重点的安置支持,也积极参与到难民和移民的政治宣传活动中。最后,我们对支持难民和移民非营利组织的个人进行了深入探讨,并就如何维持这一独特的志愿者群体提出了实践建议。
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Who Volunteers at Refugee and Immigrant Nonprofits? Results from Two Studies
Abstract Refugee and immigrant nonprofit organizations rely on their volunteers to carry out services that are critical for supporting their mission. The primary aim of this paper is to explore the types of volunteers who support refugee and immigrant nonprofits. We report findings from two independent, but complementary studies. Study 1 examined the individuals who formally volunteered before and during the COVID-19 pandemic at refugee and immigrant nonprofit organizations. In our analysis, we employed a logistic regression to understand to what extent volunteering at refugee and immigrant organizations is associated with demographic characteristics, religiosity, political views, and civic engagement. We compare volunteers assisting refugees and immigrants to volunteers serving other causes and all individuals who volunteer in the US. In Study 2, we aimed to know individuals volunteering for refugees and immigrants more deeply and conducted 15 in-depth semi-structured interviews with volunteers who supported Afghan evacuees between August 2021 and August 2022 through a refugee resettlement organization or a community sponsorship group. Findings from Study 1 indicate that volunteers supporting refugees and immigrants are more likely to be part-time workers, born outside of the US, are more liberal in their political views, and are more likely to be religious than volunteers who serve other organizations. Results from Study 2 show that volunteers were not new to volunteering for refugee and immigrant causes, were often motivated by personal or family experiences with migration or displacement and were affiliated with a congregation or synagogue. Volunteers showed that they went beyond traditional resettlement support that focused on providing immediate needs and were also active in political advocacy for refugees and immigrants. We conclude by providing exploratory insight into the individuals that support refugee and immigrant nonprofits and we offer practice implications relating to sustaining this unique group of volunteers.
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来源期刊
Nonprofit Policy Forum
Nonprofit Policy Forum PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
18.80%
发文量
23
审稿时长
7 weeks
期刊最新文献
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