Research
& Case Studies Regarding Virtual Volunteering
1997
- 2022
Final update: 29 July 2022
In association with the The Last
Virtual Volunteering Guidebook, the book's
authors created this Virtual Volunteering Wiki, including this
compilation of research, evaluation reports and case studies
regarding online volunteering / virtual volunteering. This
includes studies on the various different activities that are a
part of online volunteering such as online activism, online civic
engagement, online mentoring, microvolunteering, remote
volunteers, or crowd-sourcing, etc. These pieces linked here are
not opinion or PR pieces nor blogs - these are articles that
provide hard data, case studies, detailed examples, etc. There
are more than 100 research papers, case studies and books listed
here, dating back to 1997.
Note that sometimes articles do not call the
unpaid contributors or unpaid virtual team members "volunteers."
For instance, any research paper on Wikipedia contributors could
be considered research on virtual volunteering, as Wikipedia
contributors - Wikipedians - are unpaid by Wikimedia for those
contributions.
There are some early articles on virtual
teams, which may have involved paid contributors, because of their
contribution to early studies regarding virtual volunteering.
This list is mostly in reverse publishing or
research date order, from latest to oldest. Commentary by Jayne
Cravens is given on some entries below. Note that Jayne nor Susan
have read MOST of these articles, as we do not have access to them
(access to many of these articles costs money far out of our
budget). This list is USA-centric and English-centric.
Many of these articles are behind pay walls.
If you cannot afford to pay for access for an article, check with
a library at your nearest college or university - staff there may
be able to help you access such.
Research regarding virtual volunteering
stopped being tracked on this wiki at the end of 2022. The
reasons:
Virtual volunteering is no longer new, innovative nor
experimental. Virtual volunteering is mainstream. When this
wiki was launched, there were already thousands of nonprofits,
NGOs, charities, community groups and government agencies
involving online volunteers, but there was a need to prove it.
There was also an ongoing need to show the varied ways
organizations involve online volunteers. But now, virtual
volunteering is a commonplace term and new but not-so-unique
initiatives are launched at least weekly. There are also SO
many research articles related to virtual volunteering now,
because of the COVID-19 pandemic, it's impossible to keep up
with them as well.
I don't have the time nor the funding to continue. Without
funding, I can't afford to subscribe to news outlets so I can
read all of the stories. Also, my funded time has to take
precedence over this wiki - an entirely unfunded endeavor.
And if you are embarking on a research
project regarding virtual volunteering / online volunteering, you
really should read and reference The Last Virtual
Volunteering Guidebook, published in 2014. The
guidebook is the most comprehensive publication available
regarding virtual volunteering, including online microvolunteering
(micro tasks completed by online volunteers), virtual teams and
crowd sourcing for the benefit of nonprofits, government agencies
and other mission-based programs. The book is filled with case
studies and guidelines regarding engaging and supporting
volunteers using Internet / networking tools that are based on the
work of many different organizations across the USA and around the
world. The purpose of the book is to be a practical guide for
programs that want to involve online volunteers, or want to expand
that involvement, but it also has a great deal of information that
will be of use to those researching issues related to virtual
volunteering, online civic engagement, online mentoring,
microvolunteering, remote volunteers, crowd-sourcing for good,
prosocial online behaviors, digital inclusion, etc.
Keywords:
virtual volunteering, virtual volunteers,
digital society, digital volunteers, online participation, virtual
teams, online volunteering, cyber, volunteers, cybervolunteers,
crowdsourcing, prosocial, Internet, microvolunteering, microtasks,
online, volunteering, volunteers, crowd computing, online
activism, online civic engagement, virtual community of practice,
virtual management, virtual teams, virtual workforce, wisdom of
the crowd, hive mind.
2022
29 June 2022: "Mobilizing
Digital Volunteers to Support Underserved Communities in
India During COVID-19." Devansh Mehta, Vishnu Prasad,
Tarun Chitta, Nenavath Srinivas Naik, A. Prakash, Aditya
Vashistha. ACM SIGCAS/SIGCHI Conference on Computing and
Sustainable Societies (COMPASS). Official summary: As
community-driven organizations sought to support their
constituents through the COVID-19 crisis, many drew on
digital volunteers to expand their capacity and reach...
In this paper, we report on the activities of CGNet Swara,
a citizen journalism platform that published 401 distress
calls from vulnerable communities stranded in India due to
the imposition of a nationwide lockdown. CGNet mobilized
11 digital volunteers to help these contributors over a
period of nearly 2 months. We found that a lack of proper
guidance to digital volunteers and outdated organizational
policies resulted in demonstrable harms to vulnerable
communities. We discuss risks that are inherent in
collaborations between organizations extending themselves
to crisis response and emergent groups of digital
volunteers, and how they can be mitigated by real-time
monitoring and development of standard operating
procedures relating to impact metrics, verification
standards and disclosure policies.
29 April 2022: "Supporting
Real-time Peer-Mentoring of Rural Volunteers." By
Delvin Varghese, Tom Bartindale, K. Montague, M. Smith, P.
Olivier. CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing
Systems. Official summary: Telephone-driven community
forums have been a widely proposed solution to address the
unreliable internet connectivity and large geographic
scope that characterizes many international NGO contexts.
Primarily, these applications support asynchronous
activities, such as information portals or forums to
access rural journalism, but opportunities for real-time
experience sharing remain largely under-explored. In this
paper, we explore the potential of such forums to support
remote mentoring of NGO volunteers, a practice that
requires synchronous, dialogical formats for experience
sharing and peer discussion. We engaged 28 participants
from a rural Indian NGO in the design of peer-mentoring
sessions that leverage synchronous audio discussions,
using the structure and format of traditional talk-show
radio as a starting point. The participants favored an
entertaining approach to mentoring and discussed the
logistics required to achieve this within their resource
constraints. We conclude with design implications for
designing media-driven community engagement platforms and
the ethical challenges around protecting marginalized
community interests.
February 15, 2022: "How
Volunteer Commitment Differs in Online and Offline
Environments." By Jennifer Ihm, School of Media and
Communications, Kwangwoon University, Seoul, Korea, and M.
Shumate, School of Communication, Northwestern University,
Evanston, IL, USA. Management Communication Quarterly.
Official summary: The contemporary media environment
transforms the organization-volunteer relationship by
attenuating the formation of organizational belonging,
often thought to be the result of direct interactions and
face-to-face meetings. We examine and compare factors that
influence offline and online volunteering. We investigate
the ties for communicating about volunteering that bind
individuals to nonprofit organizations (NPOs) and the ways
that multiple levels of identification influence volunteer
commitment to these NPOs. Using structural equation
modeling, the results from an online survey of 816
volunteers suggest that online volunteers, unlike offline
volunteers, are not motivated to volunteer more by
exclusive relationships with organizational members or
their volunteer identity. Their volunteering is related to
their communication ties with both members and nonmembers
and their identification with both the organization and
the social issue. We discuss implications regarding how
the changed dynamics in online volunteering complicates
the traditional organization-volunteer relationship.
2021
November 29, 2021: "Multifaceted
volunteering: The volunteering experience in the first
wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in light of volunteering
styles." By Liat Kulik, School of Social Work,
Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel. Anal Soc Issues
Public Policy. 2021;21:1222–1242. Official summary: The
contemporary media environment transforms the
organization-volunteer relationship by attenuating the
formation of organizational belonging, often thought to be
the result of direct interactions and face-to-face
meetings. We examine and compare factors that influence
offline and online volunteering. We investigate the ties
for communicating about volunteering that bind individuals
to nonprofit organizations (NPOs) and the ways that
multiple levels of identification influence volunteer
commitment to these NPOs. Using structural equation
modeling, the results from an online survey of 816
volunteers suggest that online volunteers, unlike offline
volunteers, are not motivated to volunteer more by
exclusive relationships with organizational members or
their volunteer identity. Their volunteering is related to
their communication ties with both members and nonmembers
and their identification with both the organization and
the social issue. We discuss implications regarding how
the changed dynamics in online volunteering complicates
the traditional organization-volunteer relationship.
October 15, 2021: "Online
interaction of Olympic volunteers after the Games." By
M. Sukharkova. The article is about the community of Olympic
volunteers after the 2014 Winter Olympics and Paralympic
Games in Sochi, Krasnodar Krai, Russia, studying their
online activity in social network “Vkontakte”. The study
sought answers to the following research questions: do
volunteers maintain social online interactions five or more
years after the event, if volunteers continue online
interactions, and what topics are the most popular for
discussion in the volunteer community. It is proved that
volunteering at major sporting events contributes to the
development of the social capital of volunteers, including
by expanding the circle of acquaintances, that is, social
interactions. At the same time, social networks have a
great influence on the reproduction of social capital, so
the indicators of online interactions of volunteers can
indicate whether the volunteers support the circles of
social interactions acquired while working at the games,
and, thus, whether the volunteers support and use the
social capital acquired while working at the event.
The study shows that the highest indicators of volunteer
activity in the online community were noted from 2014 to
2016 and that the most relevant topics among the
participants of the online community are the topics of
volunteering: both memories of working at the games, as well
as information about other volunteer programs and other
topics, for example, tourism, etc. Published 15 October 2021
in Digital Sociology.
July 28, 2021: Mentoring
in the Time of COVID-19: An Analysis of Online Focus
Groups with Mentors to Youth. By Michelle R. Kaufman,
Kate Wright, Jeannette Simon, Giselle Edwards, Johannes
Thrul and David L. DuBois. This study explored the
experiences of mentors to youth during the early months of
the COVID-19 pandemic. Six online focus groups were
conducted with 39 mentors. Any mentor currently in a
mentoring relationship, regardless of type, was eligible.
Using Facebook groups, moderators posted questions and
prompts, and mentor participants responded using textual
comments. Mentees’ access to technology and privacy were the
biggest challenges faced. Mentor concerns for their mentees
varied, including mental health, school, family finances,
and access to instrumental support and food. Mentor help
involved routinely connecting with mentees and providing
academic support. Mentors requested ideas and resources for
connecting with mentees and an online mentor support group.
The research found that virtually connecting with mentees
can be difficult for mentors without prior, organized
planning and that mentors need support during the pandemic
through meaningful resources or virtual support groups. "The
two most frequent requests for support were discovering new
ways to connect with their mentees during a pandemic and
being part of a support group for mentors." Another excerpt:
"Across the board, participants agreed that an online
support group for mentors would be incredibly helpful.
Sharing ideas, discussing experiences, and connecting with
other mentors about their own stress and anxiety would
provide a much-needed outlet and resource during such
unprecedented times."
July 15, 2021: Setting
up a Digital Buddies project – What We Learned. The
Digital Buddies started during the Covid 19 pandemic to
enable older people in the Scottish Borders to connect
digitally with friends, family, groups & the wider
world. Digital Buddies teamed the older people up with a
digital buddy, often a family member, friend or neighbor.
The buddy then supports the person with whatever they wish
to learn to do at their own pace, with the aid of step by
step picture instructions and our assistance. We also
provide a tablet and access to the internet to those who do
not have access to technology. Currently there are just 15
older people in the Borders participating in Digital
Buddies. Many were apprehensive at the beginning, as
they worried they might not remember or manage. With the
help from their buddies they are now regularly using their
digital device to video call with friends and family, join
local groups, meetings or classes that have moved online
in Covid19, attend virtual religious services, do their
shopping, and much more. Resources provided to
participants include how to access the accessibility
settings on the tablet devices used, how to charge the
devices and use them to listen to podcasts, access email,
etc., as well as digital inclusion tips. This is an
outstanding case study with in-depth analysis on what worked
and how challenges were addressed, with an eye to helping
others set up a similar program.
Older Adults' Attitudes Toward Virtual
Volunteering During the COVID-19 Pandemic. 12 April
2021. Journal of Applied Gerontology. By Peter C.
Sun, Nancy Morrow-Howell, Elizabeth Pawloski, Alexander
Helbach. This study explored older adults’ technology use
patterns and attitudes toward virtual volunteering during
the COVID-19 pandemic. A 22-item survey was administered to
229 volunteers in the St. Louis region who tutor children
through the Oasis Intergenerational Tutoring program.
Although most respondents are familiar with technology and
expressed that they are likely to volunteer virtually, their
responses varied significantly by age, education, gender,
income, and school districts. Some tutors expressed that
virtual volunteering may eliminate barriers to in-person
volunteering, while others were concerned with establishing
a personal connection with students online. These findings
suggest that tutors anticipate both benefits and challenges
with virtual volunteering and that efforts to engage older
adults during the pandemic should factor in prior use of
technology and ensure that different subgroups are not
marginalized.
Building a Skills-Based, Remote Volunteer
Program - A Look Into 12 Years of Partners in Food
Solutions Operations. 3 February 2021. From Partners
in Food Solutions. This paper is based on input from the
three key teams that make our day-to-day work successful:
our Volunteer Operations team who recruit and match
volunteers, our Program Associates who oversee volunteer
engagements across several programs and countries, and our
Program Managers who serve as trusted advisors to clients
and craft the projects that they work on with our
corporate volunteers... This paper is intended to share
our best practices around building and continuously
improving a remote, skills-based volunteer program. A
key learning: We have found that setting up successful
engagements should always start with two things – first,
the client’s motivation to engage. We often say that we
work on a “pull model,” meaning that we only work on
projects that a client asks for and prioritizes. In
effect, they “pull” the expertise from us, we don’t “push”
them into prescribed generic solutions. Second,
engagements should be clearly structured from the
beginning using well-scoped project charters that include
transparent and realistic timelines, objectives, and
deliverables.
The Role of Volunteer Experience on
Performance on Online Volunteering Platforms. 6
February 2021. By Gloria Urrea of University of Colorado
Boulder - Leeds School of Business and Eunae Yoo, Assistant
Professor at Indiana University - Kelley School of
Business.. Published in Psychology Organizations &
Markets: Policies & Processes eJournal. Online
volunteering platforms allow humanitarian organizations
(HOs) to recruit volunteers to work remotely on projects.
While the removal of time and space constraints enables HOs
to scale up their volunteer force, HOs must manage greater
variation in volunteers’ experience. In this study, we
investigate the relationship between volunteers’ experience
levels and two performance metrics on these platforms:
project completion and volunteer retention. Moreover, we
study when experience becomes more relevant to project
completion depending on a project’s urgency (i.e., disaster
response vs. development). To test these relationships, we
collected a novel panel dataset from the Humanitarian
OpenStreetMap Team Tasking Manager, on which volunteers
contribute to mapping projects. Our dataset includes 5,162
online volunteering projects with 2,169,683 contributions by
96,450 volunteers. Using panel regression models, we show
that a project’s completion rate significantly depends on
the number of volunteers at each experience level (i.e.,
beginner, intermediate, advanced). Interestingly, we find
that the counts of intermediate and advanced volunteers are
equally valuable to project completion. Our analysis further
indicates that beginner volunteers should be channeled to
development projects and intermediate volunteers to disaster
response projects to enhance project completion. For
volunteer retention, we use parametric hazard models and
find that volunteers are incentivized to return to online
volunteering platforms more quickly when they are closer to
attaining the next experience-based status. However, this
effect weakens as volunteers reach higher statuses. Overall,
our study sheds light on online volunteer management and
offers operational insights for HOs as well as for online
volunteering platforms.
The
shifting sands of motivation: Revisiting what drives
contributors in open source. 9 Jan 2021. By Marco
Gerosa, Igor Wiese, Bianca Trinkenreich, Georg Link,
Gregorio Robles, Christoph Treude, Igor Steinmacher, Anita
Sarma. Paper submitted for 43rd ACM/IEEE International
Conference on Software Engineering, Madrid, Spain, to take
place June 2021. In this scientific study, the authors
investigated why people join FOSS projects and why they
continue contributing. One of our goals was to study how
contributors' motivations have changed since the 2000s. A
second goal was to take the research to the next level and
investigate how people's motivations change as they
continue contributing. The research is based on a
questionnaire answered by almost 300 FOSS contributors in
late 2020. The
paper is summarized here. The paper's findings can be
applied to many difference virtual volunteering scenarios,
not just open source projects: Knowing how new and
long-time contributors differ in motivation helps us
discover how to support them better. For example, to
attract and retain new contributors, who might become the
future workforce, projects could invest in promoting
career, fun, kinship, and learning, which are particularly
relevant for young contributors. Because over time
altruism becomes more important to contributors, FOSS
projects aiming to retain experienced contributors, who
tend to be core members or maintainers, could invest in
strategies and tools showing how their work benefits the
community and society (altruism) and improve social
interactions. Also in response to the increased rank of
altruism, hosting platforms could offer social features to
pair those needing help with those willing to help,
highlight when a contributor helps someone, and make it
easier to show appreciation to others (similar to stars
given to projects).
2020
Designing
for Helpers: Identifying new design opportunities for
digital volunteerism. By Khushnood Z. Naqshbandi,
University of Sydney, Australia, Silas Taylor, University of
New South Wales, Australia, Ajit Pillai, University of
Sydney, Australia, and Naseem Ahmadpour, University of
Sydney, Australia. Paper presented at Synergy - DRS
International Conference 2020, 11-14 August, based in
Sydney. Held online. A case study regarding Online Simulated
Patient Interaction and Assessment (OSPIA), an online
teleconferencing platform designed to support communication
skills development of medical students at an Australian
university. This platform allows medical students to conduct
practice interviews with simulated patients (SPs) and
receive feedback on these interactions. The simulated
patients are volunteers who are recruited through online
marketplaces like GoVolunteer, Seek volunteer. The
volunteers play the role of a ‘patient’ based on a given
script and then assess the performance of the medical
student as a ‘doctor’. "we identified four areas of design
opportunities to foster relatedness and gratitude in online
volunteering and reduce disparities between online and
physical volunteering experiences." https://doi.org/10.21606/drs.2020.281.
The Challenges and Opportunities of Online
Volunteering for COVID-19 Response in Iran: A Qualitative
Study. July 2020. By Hamed Seddighi, University of
Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, Iran,,
Ibrahim Salmani, School of Public Health, Shahid Sadoughi
University of Medical Sciences, Yazd, Iran, Polina Ermolaeva
and Olga Basheva, both of the Federal Center of Theoretical
and Applied Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences,
Kazan Federal University, Mehrab Shari Sedeh, Department of
Disaster Public Health, School of Public Health, Tehran
University of Medical Science. The aim of this brief report
is to identify the challenges and opportunities of online
volunteering to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic from the
perspective of the managers of the Iranian Red Crescent
Society (IRCS). Methods: In this study we have used a
qualitative method including semi-structured interviews for
investigating the opportunities and challenges of using
virtual volunteers. The eligible participants meeting the
inclusion criteria for this study were eight IRCS managers
who had used online volunteers for COVID-19 pandemic
response. Results: Having considered the interviews with
IRCS managers, we finally found seven items as opportunities
including safety, availability, recruiting more volunteers,
cost reduction, participation, geographical scope, and local
considerations. Moreover, five items were found as
challenges of online volunteering in IRCS including lack of
commitment, cultural issues, infrastructure, reimbursement,
and volunteer management. Conclusion: Online volunteering is
a significant opportunity for humanitarian organizations
especially during epidemics like the current COVID-19.
Online volunteering for COVID-19 response by the Red
Crescent involved a wide range of people including young
people, the elderly, people with disabilities and minority
groups, and people in rural areas.
COVID-19
and its Impact on Volunteering: Moving Towards Virtual
Volunteering. July 2020. Leisure Sciences. By
Erik L. Lachance. Abstract: "These unprecedented times due
to the COVID-19 pandemic have impacted the everyday lives of
individuals. A particular activity impacted by this pandemic
is leisure. Within leisure, an important activity to enhance
social outcomes (e.g., civic participation) and the survival
of organizations and events is volunteering. However, and
given social distancing measures and the combination of
postponements or cancelations of organizational or event
operations, the traditional form of in-person volunteering
is threatened. The purpose of this essay is to discuss
opportunities and challenges for organizations and events to
apply virtual volunteering as a strategy during the pandemic
and beyond. Both opportunities (i.e., creating
accessibility) and challenges (i.e., management process) are
discussed according to pertinent literature. From this, an
understanding of virtual volunteering’s value to create
leisure opportunities during the COVID-19 pandemic and
beyond is presented to advance its implementation in
organization and events by leisure practitioners." A
caution: this paper is full of many misstatements and
mistaken assumptions. For instance, the paper says that more
men than women volunteer online - this simply is NOT true at
all, and the other research on this page bears that out.
Inside the struggle to control Russia's
digital volunteering sector. 8 May 2020. "The Russian
ecosystem of volunteering and mutual assistance that has
arisen around COVID-19 is characterised by a marked
predominance of digital platforms with some relation to the
state, and by the crowding out of independent projects."
This article lists and summarizes the many, various online
efforts in Russia by citizens acting on their own,
semi-political groups, media outlets and the government to
mobilize volunteers online to take off-line action to help
vulnerable neighbors struggling because of the global
pandemic. Mentions widespread use of Telegram in some
efforts.
Networked volunteering during the 2013
Sardinian floods. Participations: Journal of
Audience and Reception Studies. May 2020. Lorenza
Parisi, Link Campus University, Rome, Italy; Francesca
Comunello, Lumsa University, Rome, Italy; Andrea Amico,
Università degli Studi di Roma La Sapienza, Italy. "The
article describes how ordinary citizens used Twitter as an
emergency-management tool during the heavy floods that
occurred in Sardinia, Italy, in November 2013. The case
study constitutes an example of digital volunteering in the
aftermath of a disaster event... The article highlights the
role of Twitter celebrities and engaged ordinary users as
digital volunteers and explains how they succeeded in
activating bottom-up disaster-relief oriented
communication."
How a face-to-face mentoring program,
StreetWise Partners in New York City, is transitioning to
virtual volunteering during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Case study by Gallup, one of the program's funders. March
2020. StreetWise provides young adults and skilled
immigrants who are unemployed or working in low-wage,
low-growth jobs with critical mentorship to unlock careers
traditionally unavailable to them. StreetWise has shifted
its in-person mentorship approach to a series of virtual
programs that engages volunteers and clients in one-on-one
employment support and emergency needs; virtual mock
interviews; and a 13-week remote workforce mentoring
program.
2019
E-Mentoring Supplement to the Elements of
Effective Practice for Mentoring (PDF). December 2019. MENTOR, formerly the National Mentoring
Partnership, published this set of standards for online
mentoring programs, and it includes case studies from various
online mentoring programs to support its recommendations
regarding screening, recruiting, training, monitoring and
closure. Its list of references on pages 24, 81 and 82 cite
several case studies, articles and research papers regarding
online mentoring.
Online volunteering at
DigiVol: an innovative crowd-sourcing approach for heritage
tourism artefacts preservation. February 2019. By Irit
Alony, Debbie Haski-Leventhal, Leonie Lockstone-Binney ORCID
Icon, Kirsten Holmes & Lucas C. P. M. Meijs. Journal
of Heritage Tourism. "This article is based on a case
study of an innovative crowd-sourcing initiative of
integrating on-site and online volunteers for the preservation
and documentation of heritage artefacts: the DigiVol program
at the Australian Museum, Sydney. This large citizen science
volunteer program has digitised an unprecedented portion of
the museum’s collections and has been recognised in Australia
and internationally as a best practice ‘volunteer digitisation
service’ model. Seeking further empirical support for the
emerging concept of ‘recruitability’ from the volunteering
literature (i.e. the ability of volunteer organisations to
recruit and retain volunteers), this research used case study
methodology. Based on interviews, focus groups, and document
analyses, the article identifies key elements of innovation
and effectiveness in DigiVol practices. The article concludes
with recommendations for programs wishing to follow best
practice and expand their recruitability, to digitise and
preserve artefacts, and therefore support science, tourism and
education."
Internet Use and
Volunteering: Relationships and Differences Across Age and
Applications. February 2019, Volume 30, Issue 1, pp
87–97. By Maximilian Filsinger and Markus Freitag. VOLUNTAS:
International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit
Organizations. "The internet plays an important part in
our daily lives. In this paper, we ask whether internet use is
negatively related to civic life when focusing specifically on
formal volunteering. Furthermore, we account for
group-specific and activity-specific internet effects. Using a
representative population sample of Switzerland, we show that
internet use decreases the probability of undertaking
voluntary work. This result is qualified in two respects:
First, we find that the negative relationship between internet
use and volunteering is more powerful among young people than
older adults who are more likely to volunteer when they use
the internet. Second, the use of social networking sites seems
to mitigate the negative influence of internet use on
volunteering."
The Civic Labor of Volunteer Moderators
Online. By J. Nathan Matias. Center for Information
Technology Policy and Department of Psychology, Princeton
University, USA. Published April 4, 2019. Abstract:
Volunteer moderators create, support, and control public
discourse for millions of people online, even as moderators’
uncompensated labor upholds platform funding models. What is
the meaning of this work and who is it for? In this article, I
examine the meanings of volunteer moderation on the social
news platform reddit. Scholarship on volunteer moderation has
viewed this work separately as digital labor for platforms,
civic participation in communities, or oligarchy among other
moderators. In mixed-methods research sampled from over 52,000
subreddit communities and in over a dozen interviews, I show
how moderators adopt all of these frames as they develop and
re-develop everyday meanings of moderation—facing the
platform, their communities, and other moderators alike. I
also show how this civic notion of digital labor brings
clarity to a strike by moderators in July 2015. Volunteer
governance remains a common approach to managing social
relations, conflict, and civil liberties online. Our ability
to see how communities negotiate the mean
Online Volunteering, A Way to
Reduce Health Inequalities: A Review Study. 2019.
Seddighi, Hamed & Salmani, Ibrahim. Journal of
Community Health Research. "Volunteering is a way for
community participation and involving local social capital.
Volunteering has potential to enhance wellbeing and reducing
health inequalities. The aim of this study is to evaluate the
effects of online volunteering on people well-being and
reducing inequalities." Jayne's note: the article doesn't
really explore this - it's more of the authors' introduction
to virtual volunteering.
2018
International Review on
Public and Nonprofit Marketing. December 2018. International
Review on Public and Nonprofit Marketing, Volume 15,
Issue 4, pp 531–552 By Filipa Silva, Teresa Proença
and Marisa R. Ferreira. This study seeks to
understand the factors that cause and sustain online
volunteerism from the volunteer’s perspective, namely the
motivations that lead the individual to volunteer online, as
well as the resulting experiences and consequences/benefits.
We did twenty-four interviews with volunteers of several
nationalities. The results contribute to the understanding and
development of new knowledge about the online volunteering
process, more precisely for a better understanding of how NPOs
can best use this resource, namely in the management,
recruiting and retaining of volunteers. The main conclusions
show that altruistic motivations and learning/career rewards
are the most common motivations. Regarding the intention for
permanence, the satisfaction associated with the experience
and the initial motivations are shown to be decisive. The
consequences/benefits are essentially associated with the
acquired learning which volunteers consider to be a valuable
future asset, and the intrinsic reward of self-actualization
and e-empowerment.
Uncovering the Periphery: A
Qualitative Survey of Episodic Volunteering in Free/Libre
and Open Source Software Communities. October 2018. By
Ann Barcomb, Andreas Kaufmann, Dirk Riehle, Klaas-Jan Stol,
and Brian Fitzgerald. Transactions on Software Engineering,
IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers). The
association is chartered under this name and it is the full
legal name. "Free/Libre and Open Source Software (FLOSS)
communities are composed, in part, of volunteers, many of whom
contribute infrequently. However, these infrequent volunteers
contribute to the sustainability of FLOSS projects, and should
ideally be encouraged to continue participating, even if they
cannot be persuaded to contribute regularly. Infrequent
contributions are part of a trend which has been widely
observed in other sectors of volunteering, where it has been
termed “episodic volunteering” (EV)... EV is widespread in
FLOSS communities, although not specifically managed. We
suggest several recommendations for managing EV based on a
framework drawn from the volunteering literature. Also,
episodic volunteers make a wide range of value-added
contributions other than code, and they should neither be
expected nor coerced into becoming habitual volunteers."
Fascinating that this paper never refers to micro
volunteering, even though many of the volunteer scenarios it
is describing are exactly that.
Case Study: The National Map Corps |
Crowdsourcing Map Data. March 2018. Over the past two
decades, the U.S. Geological Survey has sponsored various
kinds of crowdsourcing projects for collecting map data.
Volunteers in the Earth Science Corps, for example, annotated
paper topographic maps; in another project, participants
collected data points using handheld GPS devices; and in 2006,
volunteers used Web-based technology to input data. In 2012,
the USGS launched The National Map Corps to meet the need
for current, high-quality, nationwide data on schools and
other buildings. TNMCorps volunteers are successfully editing
10 different types of structures in all 50 States, including
schools, hospitals, post offices, police stations and other
important public buildings. Requirements to become a TNMCorps
volunteer are simple: computer access to the Internet, an
email address, a self-identified username and a willingness to
learn and explore new places. Using National Agricultural
Imagery Program imagery or The National Map as their primary
base layers, volunteers collect and improve data on structures
by adding new features, removing obsolete points and
correcting existing data. Fellow volunteers peer-review the
edits, which are incorporated into The National Map and
ultimately into US Topo maps. TNMCorps uses gamification
techniques and a mixture of traditional and social media for
recruiting, engaging and motivating volunteers. Gamification
includes easy sign up, virtual recognition badges, friending,
map challenges, social media interaction and a tiered editing
approach, techniques that have all proven successful.
Volunteer retention, burnout
and dropout in online voluntary organizations: stress,
conflict and retirement of Wikipedians. By Piotr
Konieczny. 2018. Research in Social Movements, Conflicts
and Change, Volume 42. Emerald Publishing Limited,
pp.199 - 219. This study investigates why contributors (online
volunteers or Wikipedians) to Wikipedia reduce activity or
discontinue volunteering and if this provides lessons from
other virtual volunteering initiatives. This analysis, based
on a survey of over a hundred English Wikipedia's volunteers
with the highest edit count, identifies a gap in the research
on volunteers burnout/drop-out, namely the importance of
inter-personal conflict as an understudied yet highly
significant factor. According to research cited in the paper,
1% of Wikipedia editors are credited with about 70% of the
value created; Top 200 active contributors are responsible for
approximately 12.5% of the site’s content, and Top 1,200 for
nearly 30%; however, almost all existing research on burnout
and dropout among Wikipedians has primarily focused on the
problems with retention of new editors on English Wikipedia.
Bridging or Deepening the
Digital Divide: Influence of Household Internet Access on
Formal and Informal Volunteering. Jaclyn Piatak, Nathan
Dietz, Brice McKeever. August 23, 2018. Nonprofit and
Voluntary Sector Quarterly, ARNOVA. Little is known
about whether the lack of digital access - the digital divide
- has repercussions on connections offline in the community.
The researchers examine the influence of access on
volunteering across four critical aspects—structure, time
devoted, level of professionalization, and pathways to
volunteering. "We find home Internet access has an independent
influence on volunteering even after controlling for
socioeconomic status. Those with access are more likely to
volunteer, formally and informally, and are more likely to
become volunteers because they were asked. However, digitally
unconnected volunteers devote more time. Nonprofit
organizations and government agencies should be strategic and
inclusive in their volunteer recruitment efforts to ensure
they recruit qualified and dedicated volunteers rather than
rely solely on digital recruitment strategies."
Doing Good Online: The
Changing Relationships Between Motivations, Activity, and
Retention Among Online Volunteers. Jul 5, 2018. By Joe
Cox, Eun Young Oh, Brooke Simmons, Gary Graham, Anita
Greenhill, Chris Lintott, Karen Masters, and Jamie Woodcock. Nonprofit
and Voluntary Sector Quarterly. "Advances in Internet
technology are making it possible for individuals to volunteer
online and participate in research-based activities of
nonprofit organizations. Using survey data from a
representative sample of such contributors, this study
investigates their motivations to volunteer for five online
volunteering projects using the Volunteer Functions Inventory.
We explore relationships between these six categories of
motivation and actual recorded measures of both volunteer
activity and retention. We also use quantile regression
analysis to investigate the extent to which these motivations
change at different stages in the volunteer process. Our
results show that volunteers’ activity and retention tend to
associate significantly and positively with the motivations of
understanding and values, as well as significantly and
negatively with the social and career motivations. We also
find the importance of motivations changes significantly
across the stages of volunteer engagement. In some cases,
especially the understanding motivation, the changes observed
for activity and retention are markedly different."
Online volunteering as a
means to overcome unequal participation? The profiles of
online and offline volunteers compared. May 23, 2018.
Kathrin Ackermann Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany;
University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands Anita Manatschal
University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland. New Media &
Society, Sage Journals. "A key question regarding the
ongoing process of digitalization is whether it enables
societies to overcome patterns of inequality or whether these
patterns are fostered in the digital sphere. The article
addresses this question for the case of online volunteering by
examining the profiles of online and offline volunteers in
terms of sociodemographics, resources, networks, and
psychological engagement. We apply quantitative methods using
a unique data set that provides comprehensive information on
online volunteering. Our results suggest that two mechanisms
are at work simultaneously: mobilization and reinforcement.
The profile of “pure” online volunteers differs from the
profile of “pure” offline volunteers (mobilization).
Meanwhile, the hybrid type combining online and offline
volunteering attracts individuals resembling offline
(reinforcement) and online volunteers (mobilization). Thus,
online volunteering seems to be both: a remedy for existing
inequalities in volunteering and a way to reinforce existing
patterns of social participation in increasingly digitized
societies." One commentary: despite the title, this paper does
not address anything regarding people with disabilities, and
research by Jayne Cravens has shown virtual volunteering does
help these people "overcome unequal participation" in many
cases.
Online Prosocial Behaviors.
2018. By Michelle F. Wright, Pennsylvania State
University, USA and William Stanley Pendergrass, American Public
University System, USA. Encyclopedia of Information
Science and Technology, Fourth Edition. 2018 "Although
there are many investigations and news stories about negative
online behaviors, less attention has been given to positive
online behaviors. There are many opportunities to receive help
or to perform prosocial acts through electronic technologies.
This chapter focuses on online prosocial behaviors. The
chapter includes sections that examine "the unique
characteristics of the cyber context and how such
characteristics are conductive to prosocial behaviors," that
focus "on various online prosocial behavior, including helping
through electronic groups, online mentoring, online donations
to charities, virtual voluntarism, and helping in other
electronic contexts (e.g., social networking sites)," that
investigate "the value of online prosocial behaviors to the
giver and receiver," that provide "theoretical explanations
for why people engage in online prosocial behavior," and
describe "solutions and recommendations for organizations
wanting to harness electronic technologies for various helping
opportunities." The paper also presents suggestions for future
research on online prosocial behavior.
2017
Digital Meaning: Exploring
and Understanding the Motivations and Experiences of Virtual
Volunteers. 2017. Vincent Xuan Feng, and Tuck Wah Leong,
both from Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology,
University of Technology Sydney, Australia. In Proceedings
of the 29th Australian Conference on Human-Computer
Interaction, Brisbane, QLD, Australia, November 2017.
"This paper identified a gap in the HCI literature in relation
to formal, organisation-led virtual volunteering and discusses
findings from a recent study detailing the main motivations of
virtual volunteers and how ICTs influenced their volunteering
experience. Example design considerations and future research
opportunities are provided."
Managing Casual Contributors.
Ann Barcomb is a PhD candidate and research assistant at the
University of Limerick in Ireland.Her
research focuses on the management of episodic, or casual,
volunteersin open source and builds upon her prior work
comparing free software and social entrepreneurship, some of
which also cited on the wiki page you are reading now. She did
a presentation at the Open Source Summit Europe 2017 (October)
on what she calls "Casual Contributors" to open source
projects: episodic online volunteers. Her presentation, based
on her research, reviews factors of engagement and retention
of "Casual Contributors" and offers tips on effective
management of these volunteers.
"Digital activism: After the
hype." September 2017. By Anne Kaun Södertörn,
University Sweden, and Julie Uldam, Roskilde University,
Denmark. Published in New Media & Society.
"Research on digital activism has gained traction in recent
years. At the same time, it remains a diverse and open field
that lacks a coherent mode of inquiry. For the better or
worse, digital activism remains a fuzzy term. In this
introduction to a special issue on digital activism, we review
current attempts to periodize and historicize digital
activism. Although there is growing body of research on
digitial activism, many contributions remain limited through
their ahistorical approach and the digital universalism that
they imply. Based on the contributions to the special issue,
we argue for studying digital activisms in a way that
traverses a two-dimensional axis of digital technologies and
activist practices, striking the balance between context and
media-specificity."
Task Workflow Design and its
impact on performance and volunteers' subjective preference
in Virtual Citizen Science. By James Sprinks Jessica
Wardlaw Robert Houghton Steven Bamford and Jeremy
Morleya.International Journal of Human-Computer Studies,
Volume 104, Pages 50-63, August 2017. "A study was performed
with the Planet Four: Craters project to investigate the
effect of task workflow design on both volunteer experience
and the scientific results they produce... The interface with
the least number of task types, variety and autonomy resulted
in the greatest data coverage. Agreement, both between
participants and with the expert equivalent, was significantly
improved when the interface most directly afforded tasks that
captured the required underlying data (i.e. crater position or
diameter)."
Significant concerns
influence online pro bono volunteering of faculty members.
By Osama Ahmed Abdelkader. Computers in Human Behavior, Volume
73, August 2017, Pages 547-553. "This study investigates the
significant concerns that prevent faculty members (FMs) from
providing additional efforts of Online Pro Bono Volunteering
(OPV). The influences of gender, age and academic achievement
(degree/experience/specialty) were tested with the Willingness
to provide OPV (WOPV) and the Extent of providing OPV (EOPV).
Twenty-three concerns were tested to explore their impact,
nine of which were deleted after the Exploratory Factor
Analysis (EFA). The other significant fourteen concerns were
grouped in four categories depending on EFA to losses,
interest, followers and proficiency. This study presents two
main contributions: first, a new instrument to measure the
concern factors of OPV, second, a proposed model to support
practitioners, developers and researchers who are interested
in OPV. Future researchers can extend the applicability of
this model to other areas of research and they can present
comparable studies that consider various nationalities,
cultures, religions or occupations."
"Temporal Motivations of
Volunteers to Participate in Cultural Crowdsourcing Work."
By Sultana Lubna Alam, Department of Information Systems and
Business Analytics, Deakin Business School, Deakin University,
Geelong, Australia and John Campbell, Research School of
Management, ANU College of Business and Economics, Australian
National University, Canberra, Australia.Information
Systems Research, July 2017. "Crowdsourcing (CS) by
cultural and heritage institutions engage volunteers in online
projects without monetary compensation. Uncertainty concerning
online volunteer motivation has led to a growing body of
academic research. This study contributes to that debate, by
extending focus to CS volunteer work in nonprofit cultural
institutions where no monetary benefit is offered to
volunteers. This study examines motivations of high performing
volunteers in a newspaper digitisation CS project, initiated
by the National Library of Australia. Volunteers are motivated
by personal, collective, and external factors, and these
motivations change over time. Volunteers initially show
intrinsic motivations, though both intrinsic and extrinsic
motivations play a critical role in their continued
participation. Volunteer contributions range from data shaping
(e.g., correcting digitised optical character recognition
data) to knowledge shaping (e.g., shaping historical data
through tagging and commenting, but also through development
of norms and social roles). The locus of motivation (intrinsic
or extrinsic) also changes with different kinds of
contributions. The distinction between data and knowledge
shaping contributions, and the locus and focus of motivation
behind these activities, has implications for the design of CS
systems. Design for improved usability through cognitive and
physical system affordances and development of social
mechanisms for ongoing participation is discussed."
Centralized Crowdsourcing in
Disaster Management: Findings and Implications. By D.
Auferbauer, Austrian Institute of Technology, Vienna, Austria
and H. Tellioğlu TU Wien, (Vienna Univ. of Technology),
Vienna, Austria. Presented as a part of C&T '17
Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Communities
and Technologies, Troyes, France June 2017, Pages 173-182.
"Computer supported cooperative work (CSCW) has become an
important aspect in crisis and disaster management. Volunteers
undertaking relief efforts in affected areas are increasingly
using information and communication technologies to coordinate
their work. Relief organizations are recognizing this trend
and have started to adapt new communication channels to
interact with citizens. In this paper, we describe the
crowdtasking approach, a centralized form of crowdsourcing for
crisis and disaster management. We present a prototype
implementation of the approach and report on our findings from
the system's first field trial. We conclude by discussing
implications of this approach for CSCW and community building
in crisis and disaster management. Lastly, we give an outlook
on future research based on our experience with crowdtasking."
"A framework for analyzing
digital volunteer contributions in emergent crisis response
efforts." By Chul Hyun Park and Erik W Johnston. Arizona
State University, USA.New Media & Society, May
22, 2017 "Advances in information, communication, and
computational technologies allow digital volunteer networks
formed by concerned publics across the globe to contribute to
an effective response to disasters and crises. Digital
volunteer networks are event-centric and emergent networks.
Currently, the literature is sharply growing in the fields of
communication, computer science, emergency management, and
geography. This article aims to assess the current status of
the literature and suggest a comprehensive conceptual
framework of digital volunteer networks in response to
disasters and crises. This framework is based on a traditional
input–process–output model consisting of three dimensions: the
disaster and crisis context, a voluntary response process, and
outputs and outcomes. We also discuss challenges of digital
volunteer networks for crisis response. This article is
expected to contribute to the development of related theories
and hypotheses and practical strategies for managing digital
volunteer networks."
"Classifying and Relating
Different Types of Online and Offline Volunteering by
Jennifer Ihm, School of Communications, Kwangwoon University,
Seoul, Republic of Korea. January 2017. VOLUNTAS:
International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit
Organizations, February 2017, Volume 28, Issue 1, pp
400–419. "The contemporary media environment allows for online
volunteering where volunteers can participate without being
physically present or being affiliated with a traditional
organization. Challenging the traditional types of
volunteering and accounting for the new trends, this study
identifies different types of online and offline volunteering
and examines the relationship between them. Drawing on online
survey data from 816 U.S.-based volunteers, this study finds
that active online volunteers are also active offline
volunteers, suggesting that volunteering in one sphere can
complement volunteering in the other sphere. This study
discusses implications for understanding volunteering as a
complex activity where individuals engage in varied
organizational contexts to different degrees and extend their
participation to both online and offline spheres."
2016
"Prioritizing Disaster Mapping
Tasks for Online Volunteers Based on Information Value
Theory." By Yingjie Hu, Krzysztof Janowicz, and Helen
Couclelis.Geographical Analysis, The Ohio State University, 13
October 2016. "In recent years, online volunteers have played
important roles in disaster response. After a major disaster,
hundreds of volunteers are often remotely convened by
humanitarian organizations to map the affected area based on
remote sensing images. Typically, the affected area is divided
using a grid-based tessellation, and each volunteer can select
one grid cell to start mapping. While this approach
coordinates the efforts of volunteers, it does not
differentiate the priorities of different cells. As a result,
volunteers may map grid cells in a random order. Due to the
spatial heterogeneity, different cells may contain geographic
information that is of different value to emergency
responders. Ideally, cells that potentially contain more
valuable information should be assigned higher priority for
mapping. This article presents an analytical framework for
prioritizing the mapping of cells based on the values of
information contained in these cells. Our objective is to
provide guidance for online volunteers so that potentially
more important cells are mapped first. We present a method
that is based on information value theory and focus on road
networks. We apply this method to a number of simulated
scenarios and to a real disaster mapping case from the 2015
Nepal earthquake."
"Episodic volunteering in open
source communities." In Proceedings of the 20th
International Conference on Evaluation and Assessment in
Software Engineering. By Ann Barcomb, published as part of the
proceedings of the 20th International Conference on Evaluation
and Assessment in Software Engineering, 2016. "Episodic
volunteers, who prefer short term engagement to habitual
contributions, are present in Free/Libre and Open Source
Software (FLOSS) communities. Little is known about how they
are viewed within their communities, how they view their
communities, how community managers are managing them, or even
how many episodic volunteers contribute to FLOSS projects and
how much they contribute. Knowing more about the prevalence
and management of episodic volunteers in FLOSS will help
community managers make better decisions for engaging and
utilizing these volunteers. My dissertation addresses these
questions, providing a picture of what episodic volunteering
looks like in the context of FLOSS communities."
Digital Humanitarians:
Citizen journalists on the virtual front line of natural and
human-caused disastersby Wendy Norris, College of Media,
Communication and Information, University of Colorado Boulder,
USA. 16 Sep 2016. "Networks of virtual volunteers act as
digital humanitarians who rapidly assemble situational
awareness at the onset of natural and human-caused disasters
through crowdsourcing, data analysis and crisis mapping to aid
on-the-ground emergency response.... This exploratory study
contends that the knowledge-based content produced by these
groups is citizen journalism akin to data-driven investigative
news."
Using Students as a
Distributed Coding Team for Validation through Intercoder
Agreement. A. Kaufmann, A. Barcomb and D. Riehle.
Published by Friedrich-Alexander Universit, Erlangen-Nurnberg,
Department of Computer Science, 2016. "We find that intercoder
agreement between a large number of students is almost as good
as the intercoder agreement between two professionals working
on the same materials."
Involvement and Perception of
Microvolunteering: published in July 2016. 238 people
responded to a survey by Help From Homeover 13
months, through June 2016. The majority of respondents were
female. ‘It was easy’, ‘quick’, and ‘on demand’ all scored
highly as answers for the question regarding motivation to
volunteer for microtasks. 13% of respondents stated they had
stopped microvolunteering because they ‘couldn’t find time to
do it’, which confirms that even this form of virtual
volunteering takes real time, not virtual time. Previous
research regarding online micro volunteering can be found
below, and at this Help From Home page.
Not So Passive: Engagement
and Learning in Volunteer Computing Projects. By Laure
Kloetzer, Julien Da Costa and Daniel K. Schneider.//Human Computation///,
2016. "This paper focuses on an unexplored dimension of
Citizen Science: the educational potential of Volunteer
Computing (VC). VC has been one of the most popular forms of
Citizen Science, since its beginnings from 1997, when the
first VC platforms, such as SETI@home, were created.
Participation in VC is based on volunteers donating their idle
computer resources to contribute to large scale scientific
research. So far this has often been seen as a rather passive
form of participation, compared to other online Citizen
Science (or citizen cyberscience) projects, since volunteers
are not involved in active data collection, data analysis or
project definition. In this paper we present our research
conducted in 2013-2014 with the BOINC Community “Alliance
Francophone”, and demonstrate that part of the volunteers in
Distributed Computing research projects are not passive at
all. We show that the dynamism of BOINC hugely relies on
community-led gamification and that participation may lead to
important learning outcomes on most dimensions of our ILICS
(Informal Learning in Citizen Science) model. This includes
extending one’s scientific interests, ability to find and
engage with people who share similar interests, and offering a
range of potential learning outcomes, particularly within the
fields of (a) computer and Internet literacy, (b) scientific
knowledge and literacy, (c) communication: English and social
skills. As demonstrated by our recent ILICS survey research
(2015), these latest learning effects happen for all kinds of
participants and are even stronger for people who have a lower
education background, which is an interesting finding for
lifelong education policies. Altogether, VC projects engage
volunteers emotionally, far beyond a simple use of their
computers’ time and power, and may have an educational value.
For a minority of very active volunteers, they become real
“Opportunity Spaces”, where they can get new friends, skills
and experiences, which they could not have found easily
elsewhere in their everyday environment."
Julia Bear of Stony Brook
University’s College of Business and Benjamin Collier of
Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar published "Where are the Women in
Wikipedia? Understanding the Different Psychological
Experiences of Men and Women in Wikipedia"in the journal
Sex Roles January 2016. "We proposed that masculine
norms for behavior in Wikipedia, which may be further
exacerbated by the disinhibiting nature of an online,
anonymous environment, lead to different psychological
experiences for women and men, which, in turn, explain
gender differences in contribution behavior. We
hypothesized that, among a sample of individuals who
occasionally contribute to Wikipedia, women would report
less confidence in their expertise, more discomfort with
editing others’ work, and more negative responses to
critical feedback compared to men, all of which are
crucial aspects of contributing to Wikipedia. We also
hypothesized that gender differences in these
psychological experiences would explain women’s lower
contribution rate compared to men in this sample...
Significant gender differences were found in confidence in
expertise, discomfort with editing, and response to
critical feedback. Women reported less confidence in their
expertise, expressed greater discomfort with editing
(which typically involves conflict) and reported more
negative responses to critical feedback compared to men.
Mediation analyses revealed that confidence in expertise
and discomfort with editing partially mediated the gender
difference in number of articles edited, the standard
measure for contribution to Wikipedia. Implications for
the gender gap in Wikipedia and in organizations more
generally are discussed."Their study was summarized
in this 02 June 2016 articleWhy Do So Few Women Edit
Wikipedia?. Note: Those that edit Wikipedia are called
Wikipedians, and they are online volunteers. But relatively
few of them are women. The most recent survey of users, in
2011, found just 9% of worldwide contributors to the site
were women; in the U.S., it was 15%. In 2015, Jimmy Wales,
the founder of the Wikimedia Foundation, which runs the
site, said that the organization failed to meet its goal of
increasing women’s participation to 25% by 2015, despite
launching several initiatives.
2015
Two journal articles look at
"serial activists", who are independent online volunteers
using their social media channels to support protest movements
in other countries: “Serial Activists: Political
Twitter Beyond Influentials and the Twittertariat,
published in May 2015, andBeing a Serial Activist, published in
January 2016, are both by Marco T Bastos of Duke University,
USA and Dan Mercea of City University London, UK. In the
papers, researchers said they found that these activists don't
have huge followers, but that they "bridge disparate language
communities and facilitate collective action by virtue of
their dedication to multiple causes." The researchers also
note that how serial activists differ from "influentials" or
traditional grassroots activists. The papers also review the
motivations of these volunteers and how they balance their
substantial time online with work and family.
Virtual volunteering in social service
non-profit organizations: A case study. Mcskimming,
Yvonne Rachele. 2015. A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty
of Social and Applied Sciences in Partial Fulfillment of the
Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Social Sciences,
Royal Roads University, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. Abstract:
This case study examined how managers of social service
non-profit organizations in the Greater Vancouver area are
responding to the emergence of virtual volunteering. The
literature indicates virtual volunteering is a relatively new
activity with limited research directed towards social service
non-profit organizations. Participants involved in the study
stated they knew very little about virtual volunteerism, and
as a result, were not clear if the approach was one they could
adopt or benefit from. Recommendations include further
examination of virtual volunteerism and the creation of a
common definition for the social service non-profit sector;
identification of how the constructs of social presence theory
(i.e., authenticity, realness, credibility) can be
demonstrated in virtual interactions; the development of an
assessment process to analyze the viability and relativity of
virtual interactions; and the development of a process and
practice designed to capture volunteer meaningfulness in
virtual interactions to support quality improvement efforts
and volunteer satisfaction
VolEx Research Project:
Volunteer Experience in the Digital Age. This is an
interdisciplinary research project involving researchers from
three UK universities: the School of Management at Royal
Holloway University of London, Department of Sociology and the
Digital World Research Centre at the University of Surrey, and
the Department of People and Organisations at The Open
University. "There is a need for both academic and
practitioner knowledge in understanding how volunteers are
integrating new technologies into their volunteer activities,
how third sector organizations are utilising digital tools to
support and enhance the practice of volunteering, and what
challenges and opportunities are arising as a result. As a
consequence, our research seeks to address the issue: How is
the practice of volunteering being reconfigured in the digital
age?"
Gauging Receptiveness to
Social Microvolunteering. This white paper by Erin
Brady, Meredith Ringel Morris, and Jeffrey P. Bigham, for Microsoft Research and submitted to the
Association for Computing Machinery’s Human Factors in
Computing Systems (CHI 2015), defines the term social
microvolunteering as "a type of intermediated friendsourcing
in which a person can provide access to their friends as
potential workers for microtasks supporting causes that they
care about. We explore this idea by creating Visual Answers,
an exemplar social microvolunteering application for Facebook
that posts visual questions from people who are blind. We
present results of a survey of 350 participants on the concept
of social microvolunteering, and a deployment of the Visual
Answers application with 91 participants, which collected 618
high-quality answers to questions asked over 12 days,
illustrating the feasibility of the approach." Also "Facebook
users responded positively to the suggested application in a
survey, and many went on to install the application. Overall,
the questions posted to volunteer’s Facebook accounts were
answered correctly and quickly, and volunteers reported
positive attitudes toward the application after the pilot
period was complete, demonstrating the real-world feasibility
of our approach."
Human factors in East Asian
virtual teamwork: a comparative study of Indonesia, Taiwan
and Vietnam. By Ngan Collins, Yu-Min Chou, Malcolm
Warner & Chris Rowley. Published in The International
Journal of Human Resource Management, Volume 28, 2017 - Issue
10: Human resource management in Asia: Distinctiveness of
Asian Human Resource Management. Oct 2015. "There has been
considerable research into the technical aspects of virtual
teams. By contrast, few studies have focused on their ‘human
factors’, such as the way team members cooperate within the
context of cross-national boundaries. This study applies a
‘mixed method’ approach to research virtual teams in three
Asian economies: Indonesia, Taiwan and Vietnam. We find that
critical human factors, including individual cultural
intelligence, cultural openness and self-efficacy,
significantly influence team member knowledge sharing
willingness in cross-national virtual teams. However, a
positive relationship between team member knowledge sharing
willingness and knowledge sharing behaviour is not supported
because other elements, such as interpersonal trust,
leadership, team interaction and member language ability, can
significantly affect the effect of the above mentioned factors
on virtual team knowledge sharing. Our study offers a new
model to improve the study of virtual teamwork and provides
practical applications for managing cross-national teams,
especially in the selection, training and development of team
members."
Social
microvolunteering: quick, free answers to visual questions
from blind people. By Erin Brady, University of
Rochester. First presented in June 2015. This dissertation
explores VizWiz Social, a mobile phone question asking
application for blind users, as a way to examine question
routing when using technology to get nearly-realtime answers
to visual questions.
Designing
a Micro-Volunteering Platform for Situated Crowdsourcing.
By Yi-Ching Huang, Graduate Institute of Networking and
Multimedia, Taipei City, Taiwan Roc. March 2015. Dissertation
research paper presented at the 2015 Computer Supported
Cooperative Work & Social Computing conference (CSCW).
Investigates "whether micro-volunteering can be applied
successfully to a situated crowdsourcing platform for
contributing problem-solving efforts with high-quality
results."
"Virtual Mentoring for
Volunteer Leadership Development." Guloy, Sheryl. May 15,
2015. Dissertation, unpublished. Available to download from
this URL at the Internet Archive: http://summit.sfu.ca/system/files/iritems1/15491/etd9027_SGuloy.pdf.
Abstract: Calls to investigate leadership development
in the nonprofit and voluntary sector have been put forth as
concerns about leadership succession have increased. To
respond to this call to investigate this under-researched
area, this design-based, multiple case study provides rich,
thick descriptions of the development of the mentoring
relationships, between mentor and mentee pairs, over the
course of a virtual mentoring program for volunteer leadership
development, in a Catholic nonprofit. I explored how
participants’ perceptions of their online interactions shaped
their experiences and the development of their mentoring
relationships while examining the extent to which mentoring
contributed to a greater willingness, on the part of mentees,
to accept volunteer leadership opportunities. The findings of
this study lay the groundwork for future research into virtual
mentoring environments for volunteer leadership
development.The experiences of seven mentor-mentee case pairs
were examined to explore the development of their mentoring
relationships. Each pair’s online interactions were observed
for six months, from the initial orientation session until the
final note was posted. Participants were interviewed two
months, four months, and six months into their participation.
Data from online communications, weekly logs, and
questionnaires were triangulated against mentor and mentee
perceptions that emerged within the context of virtual
mentoring for volunteer leadership. The compatibility between
mentor and mentee expectations, with respect to mentoring
approach and mentoring environment, contributed to perceptions
about the quality of the mentoring relationship. The CLM was
generally perceived by mentees to contribute to leader
development, although relationships in which the mentor used a
contribution-oriented approach, rather than a
guidance-oriented approach, was found to be more complementary
to the supports offered by the program. Design considerations
include mitigating communication delays and determining
whether social media and mobile platforms, which were found to
contribute to positive perceptions about the mentoring
experience, can forward program goals. The findings have
implications for leadership, based on notions of social
participation, in which the meaning of willingness to lead
shifts from that of formal acceptance of a leadership position
to greater participation in leadership activities.
"The
media festival volunteer: Connecting online and on-ground
fan labor" by Robert Moses Peaslee, Jessica El-Khoury,
and Ashley Liles. Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas,
United States. Published in 2014 inTransformative Works and Cultures(TWC),
ISSN 1941-2258. "Online fan labor occurs via interactive media
devoted to objects of fan esteem, while on-ground fan labor is
best illustrated by the act of volunteering at a media-related
festival or event, for example a film festival, a comic con,
or a technology expo..." The paper considers fan labor as
volunteers because contributors are unpaid, and uses
qualitative research data gathered at Fantastic Fest in
Austin, Texas, in September 2012 for the paper. "Our data
suggest that paying attention to volunteerism—much like paying
attention to fan fiction—is crucial for understanding fandom
in the context of an increasingly decentralized and
user-powered, though not user-owned, media industry, and that
consideration of the media festival or fan convention
environment is crucial for understanding relationships between
the volunteer impulse, social and cultural capital, and power.
We conclude that volunteering at Fantastic Fest, and by
extension at other media-related festivals, is an ambivalent
activity: while it promotes the building of social capital and
thus aids a kind of civic engagement, it often simultaneously
encourages those communities to provide unpaid, on-ground
labor to the industries of which volunteers one day hope to be
a part."
Two researchers at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität
Erlangen-Nürnbergin Germany,Ann BarcombandDirk Riehle, are working on aproject to understand the concepts,
processes, and tools that make open collaborative
communities work. A particular goal is the creation of a
best practices handbook for managing such communities. "Open
source projects, wiki communities, and Wikipedia all share
something in common: They are open collaborative communities
steeped in technology with typically no single person in
charge; in this they are very different from more traditional
projects. Our prior analysis showed that these communities
follow three core principles: They are egalitarian (everyone
may join, no apriori barriers to entry exist), meritocratic
(decisions are based on the merits of an argument, not on
status), and self-organizing (communities choose their own
processes rather than get them dictated)."
Carmit-Noa Shpigelman
(2014). Electronic mentoring and media. In D. L. DuBois &
M. J. Karcher (Eds.),Handbook of youth mentoring(2nd ed.,
pp. 259-272). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
The Virtual
Volunteering WikiThe Last Virtual Volunteering Guidebook
by Jayne Cravens and Susan Ellis. The book was published
January 2014, the wiki is continually updated. The book is the
result of several years of research and experience by the
authors regarding nonprofit organizations, schools, government
agencies and other mission-based organizations using the
Internet to support and involve volunteers. It is a practical
guide to help organizations start, improve or expand virtual
volunteering activities, including micro volunteering, online
mentoring and other Internet-mediated volunteering. Whereas
the book provides details on suggested practices regarding
introducing virtual volunteering to an organization,
recruiting online volunteers, screening and training online
volunteers, working with online volunteers, evaluating virtual
volunteering efforts, creating policies, etc., and includes
short case studies to illustrate suggestions in practice, the
wiki is a dynamic online resource that is focused on
showcasing research on subjects related to virtual
volunteering (the page you are reading now) and tech tools
that are used or can be used to engage with or support
volunteers.
The ICT4EMPL Future Work project, which
included research on Internet-mediated volunteering (virtual
volunteering, microvolunteering, etc.) with regards to how it
is practised in Europe, how widespread it is in Europe, and
any role it does or could play with regard to employability
(career exploration, skills development, job connections, job
promotion, etc.) and to social inclusion. Its wiki is a
knowledge base of resources used to create the final report.
This research was undertaken by Jayne Cravens from April -
August 2013, for the overall ICT4EMPL Future Work project by:
European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Institute for
Prospective Technological Studies, Information Society Unit,http://is.jrc.ec.europa.eu.
An
architecture for synchronous micro-volunteering in Africa
using social media, by L. Butgereit, Meraka Institute,
Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, South Africa, and R.
A. Botha. Presented at 2013 IEEE
International Conference Pervasive Computing and
Communications Workshops (PERCOM). "There are many
successful examples of Virtual Volunteering such as the
Gutenberg project and the Librivox project. However, in both
these cases, a volunteer must donate a substantial amount of
his or her time in activities such as reading books or
proofreading books. This paper examines the concept of
synchronous micro-volunteering where potential volunteers can
effectively donate as little as 10 minutes of their time and
immediately assist other people. The paper then describes the
architecture which supports synchronous micro-volunteering."
“Welcome !” Social and
Psychological Predictors of Volunteer Socializers in Online
Communities. CSCW’13, February 23–27, 2013, San Antonio,
Texas, USA. 2013 ACM 978-1-4503-1331-5/13/02. by Gary Hsieh,
Youyang Hou and Ian Chen, Communication Arts and Sciences,
Department of Psychology, Michigan State University and Khai
N. Truong, Department of Computer Science, University of
Toronto. Abstract: Volunteer socializers are members of a
community who voluntarily help newcomers become familiar with
the popular practices and attitudes of the community. In this
paper, we explore the social and psychological predictors of
volunteer socializers on reddit, an online social newssharing
community. Through a survey of over 1000 Reddit users, we
found that social identity, prosocial-orientation and
generalized reciprocity are all predictors of socializers in
the community. Interestingly, a user’s tenure with the online
community has a quadratic effect on volunteer socialization
behaviors—new and long-time members are both more likely to
help newcomers than those in between. We conclude with design
implications for motivating users to help newcomers.
Working and sustaining the virtual "Disaster
Desk". Authors: Kate Starbird and Leysia Palen. CSCW
'13: Proceedings of the 2013 conference on Computer supported
cooperative work, February 2013, Pages 491–502. Abstract:
Humanity Road is a volunteer organization working within the
domain of disaster response. The organization is entirely
virtual, relying on ICT to both organize and execute its work
of helping to inform the public on how to survive after
disaster events. This paper follows the trajectory of Humanity
Road from an emergent group to a formal non-profit,
considering how its articulation, conduct and products of work
together express its identity and purpose, which include
aspirations of relating to and changing the larger ecosystem
of emergency response. Through excerpts of its communications,
we consider how the organization makes changes in order to
sustain itself in rapid-response work supported in large part
by episodic influxes of volunteers. This case enlightens
discussion about technology-supported civic participation, and
the means by which dedicated long-term commitment to the civic
sphere is mobilized.
"Delivering patients to sacré coeur:
collective intelligence in digital volunteer communities."
Author: Kate Starbird. CHI '13: Proceedings of the SIGCHI
Conference on Human Factors in Computing SystemsApril 2013
Pages 801–810. Abstract: This study examines the
information-processing activities of digital volunteers and
other connected ICT users in the wake of crisis events.
Synthesizing findings from several previous research studies
of digital volunteerism, this paper offers a new approach for
conceptualizing the activities of digital volunteers, shifting
from a focus on organizing to a focus on information movement.
Using the lens of distributed cognition, this research
describes collective intelligence as transformations of
information within a system where cognition is distributed
socially across individuals as well as through their tools and
resources. This paper demonstrates how digital volunteers,
through activities such as relaying, amplifying, verifying,
and structuring information, function as a collectively
intelligent cognitive system in the wake of disaster events.
Micro-volunteering: doing
some good through smartphones? Johnathan
Paylor (2012 June). Institute for Volunteering Research. A
report on a survey of people who used the smartphone app Do
Some Good, available through the telecommunications company
Orange, conducted from June 2011 until December 2011. 3,598
people completed the survey. Participants were largely from
the U.K.. 56% were female, and 78% between 16 and 34. However,
the survey did not explore what motivated volunteers to choose
tasks or organisations to support (only their motivation for
using the app and being interested in microvolunteering) and
the report does not note what kinds of tasks volunteers
undertook. Also, the survey did not explore the perspectives
of the organisations that recruited online volunteers using
the app, and this restricts what can be said about the impact
of the volunteers’ actions beyond benefits for themselves.
Prosocial behaviors in the
cyber context. January 2012. Michelle F. Wright and Yan
Li, Department of Psychology, DePaul University. Prosocial
behaviors are defined as purposeful and voluntary acts
directed toward other people or society as a whole and may
include such behaviors as helping, sharing, donating, and
volunteering. Prosocial behaviors in the cyber context can
take various forms, including donating time and attention to
electronic discussion boards or technical support groups,
helping among employees at the corporate level, voluntarily
helping players in computer games, online mentoring, sharing
open source software, virtual voluntarism, and making
charitable donations to organizations online. "Not only is the
internet being used for charitable donations, it is also a
ripe environment for virtual voluntarism. One of the first
investigations to examine virtual voluntarism (i.e.,
voluntarism completed in whole or in part through the internet
or other internet connected devices), the Virtual Volunteering
Project, assessed the first-hand experiences of almost 200
agencies involving online volunteers." The list of references
in this paper are a good place to further research online
behavior as it relates to positive actions online, which very
often are not called "virtual volunteering" (but should
be).
Virtual Volunteering and
Digital Engagement: A Qualitative Investigation.
Volunteering Queensland (Australia) "conducted in-depth
interviews with five diverse organisations, took a close look
at the practice of three organisations in the form of case
studies, and undertook a crowdsourcing experiment on Twitter."
The findings are presented, followed by "a discussion of their
significance for policy and practice." This research was
authored by James Schier, Erin Gregor and Sarah McAtamney and
supervised by Mark Creyton. January 2012.
"Social Capital, Social
Networks, and the Social Web; The Case of Virtual
Volunteering," by Dhrubodhi Mukherjee,
Southern Illinois University, USA, from the book Virtual Communities:
Concepts, Methodologies, Tools and Applications.,
published in 2011. Abstract: Social interaction technologies
create communicative possibilities that go beyond dyadic
interactions and across physical boundaries, bringing a
qualitative shift in the functioning of the Internet. The
present chapter employs social capital and social networks
perspectives to identify the social determinants of virtual
volunteering in the age of Web 2.0, explores the social
motivation of volunteers who perform tasks using the Social
Web in the context of online volunteering, and addresses the
dynamic interplay of social capital, social networks, and the
Social Web with implications for virtual volunteering. The
argument furthered is that active participation in social
networks generates social capital and facilitates the
development of the Social Web.
"Participation
of Older Adults in Virtual Volunteering: A Qualitative
Analysis." by Dhrubodhi
Mukherjee. 2011. Published in Ageing International. "This
study takes the initiative to generate new knowledge on how
the Internet can play an active role in facilitating
volunteerism among older people. It explores the demographic
characteristics, motivation, and types of tasks performed by
older adults while volunteering in a virtual environment.
Given the emerging support infrastructure to facilitate
virtual volunteering among older adults, this study sought
to better comprehend the profiles and motivations of older
virtual volunteers. In particular, the study wishes to
understand if parallels could be drawn between on-site
volunteering and online volunteering among older adults.
Correspondingly, the study also explores whether
participation in virtual volunteering by older adults
increased their sense of belonging."
"Is virtual volunteering
beneficial or challenging to an organisation and its
volunteers?" by Mohammed A Abdullahi. Masters thesis for
Coventry University, UK. 2011. Abstract: Volunteering
research has continued to grasp the attention of many
researchers in recent years (Wilson and Musick 1997; Harris
2000; Starnes 2004). This is due to the importance of
volunteering to the lives of people and the society’s at large
(Little 1999; Primavera 1999; McClintock 2002; Susan et al
2011). However, virtual volunteering which is an emerging
aspect of volunteering has significantly been under researched
(Pena-Lopez 2007), despite the existence of this type of
volunteering for over a decade (Cravens 2006). The researches
that exist on virtual volunteering are based on assumptions or
borrow from the literature of home working, telecommuting or
virtual organisation (Adveco 2005, Sauder 2011). There is a
clear lack of scholarly research into virtual volunteering
(Pena-Lopez 2007). Thus, this study is one of the few studies
on virtual volunteering which has conducted empirical primary
research in the UK. In this study, the benefits and challenges
of virtual volunteering were explored, using a dual
perspective (organisational and virtual volunteers
perspectives). Virtual volunteering, was identified to have
benefits such as greater coverage of volunteers, fits into
volunteers personal commitments (due to its flexibilities),
and encourages the development of social capital and
employability skills amongst other benefits. Virtual
volunteering was identified to have challenges such as
volunteer management, volunteer isolation, miscommunication
between the virtual volunteers and their organisation amongst
other challenges. The study compared and contrasted the views
of the virtual volunteers and their organisation as to the
benefits and challenges of virtual volunteering.
"Itragroup Structuring and Interpersonal
Perception in Real Contact and Virtual Volunteer Groups."
by Kondratyev M.Yu, Doctor of Psychology, Corresponding
Member, Russian Academy of Education, Moscow, Russia and
Lyubimova O.A., educational psychologist, Department of
Methodical Support for the Educational Psychology Service,
Moscow State University of Psychology and Education, Moscow,
Russia. Social Psychology and Society, 2011. Vol. 2, no. 4,
71–86, ISSN: 2221-1527 / 2311-7052 (online). The article
presents results of a study on the itragroup structuring and
interpersonal perception in three types of groups that differ
by the degree of virtuality: 1) really functioning groups of
volunteers, 2) relatively virtual groups of volunteers and 3)
maximally virtual groups of volunteers. The results indicate
that the degree of virtuality of these communities determines
both the nature of informal itragroup structure and peer
assessment features in such groups. Another important result
of the study demonstrated that in the continuum of “a real,
functioning contact group — a maximally virtual group” a
significant “middle” position in terms of socio-psychological
content is occupied by the relatively virtual groups.
Additionally, it was shown that the degree of virtuality of
pro-socially oriented volunteer groups to a great extent
determines the characteristics of their unity.
"Voluntweeters": self-organizing by digital
volunteers in times of crisis. By Kate Starbird and
Leysia Palen. CHI '11: Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on
Human Factors in Computing Systems. May 2011 Pages 1071–1080.
Abstract: This empirical study of "digital volunteers" in the
aftermath of the January 12, 2010 Haiti earthquake describes
their behaviors and mechanisms of self-organizing in the
information space of a microblogging environment, where
collaborators were newly found and distributed across
continents. The paper explores the motivations, resources,
activities and products of digital volunteers. It describes
how seemingly small features of the technical environment
offered structure for self-organizing, while considering how
the social-technical milieu enabled individual capacities and
collective action. Using social theory about self-organizing,
the research offers insight about features of coordination
within a setting of massive interaction.
2010
"The ‘popular’ culture of
internet activism." December 2010. By Tatiana
Tatarchevskiy, University of Virginia, USA. Published in New Media & Society.
How does the internet contribute to changes in civic
engagement in the USA? To answer this question we must examine
the institutional context of US marketizing civil society and
the cultures of good citizenship constructed online. Drawing
upon the findings from a case study of ONE, a campaign
targeting extreme poverty and the spread of AIDS, I
demonstrate how the internet may function as a space of new
divisions of labor between civil society organizational actors
and lay activists. While organizational actors use Web 2.0 to
make activism convenient and standardized, the public is asked
to participate in what I term ‘visual labor’, creating and
representing images of community online that legitimize the
organization’s claims. At the same time, volunteer action is
understood largely as performative. Ultimately, the article
confronts the understanding of the internet as a
post-bureaucratic democracy and emphasizes its cultural role
in communicative capitalism.
"‘Volunteering is like any
other business’: Civic participation and social media."
September 2010. By Anne Kaun Södertörn, University Sweden, and
Julie Uldam, Roskilde University, Denmark. Published in New
Media & Society. "The increased influx of refugees
in 2015 has led to challenges in transition and destination
countries such as Germany, Sweden and Denmark. Volunteer-led
initiatives providing urgent relief played a crucial role in
meeting the needs of arriving refugees. The work of the
volunteers in central stations and transition shelters was
mainly organised with the help of Facebook, in terms of both
inward and outward communications. This article examines the
role of social media for civic participation drawing on
Swedish volunteer initiatives that emerged in the context of
the migration crisis in 2015 as a case study. Theoretically,
this article provides an analytical framework, including power
relations, technological affordances, practices and
discourses, which helps shed light on the interrelation
between social media and civic participation."
Wikipedia Survey – Overview
of Results, by Ruediger Glott, Philipp Schmidt and Rishab
Ghosh. Published in March 2010. In a survey of contributors to
all Wikipedia sites (22 language editions in 231 countries) by
UNU-MERIT, a joint research and training centre of United
Nations University (UNU) and Maastricht University, in
cooperation with the Wikimedia Foundation, the largest share
of responses was provided by users who accessed the survey via
the Russian or English Wikipedia sites, followed by users of
the German and Spanish versions. Contributors were split into
four approximately equal age-groups: those under 18, those
between 18 and 22, those from 22 to 30 and the remainder
between 30 and 85. About 23% of contributors had completed
degree-level education, 26% were undergraduates and 45% had
secondary education or less. 87% of respondents were men and
13% were women. Download from http://www.wikipediastudy.org
"An exploratory study of older
adults' engagement with virtual volunteerism."Dhrubodhi Mukherjee.
2010. Published in Journal of Technology in Human Services.
Interviews done with volunteers through SeniorNet.
"Implications of this study include reconceptualization of
virtual volunteering as a strategic tool to recruit older
adults and greater usage of information communication
technologies to promote civic engagement among older people
and, thus, positively influence their health and well-being."
"Volunteered Geographic Information and
Crowdsourcing Disaster Relief: A Case Study of the Haitian
Earthquake," by Matthew Zook, University of Kentucky,
Mark Graham, University of Oxford, Taylor Shelton, University
of Kentucky, Sean Gorman, FortiusOne. FromWorld Medical
& Health Policy, Vol. 2: Iss. 2, Article 2, published in
2010. Abstract: This paper outlines the ways in which
information technologies (ITs) were used in the Haiti relief
effort, especially with respect to web-based mapping
services. Although there were numerous ways in which this
took place, this paper focuses on four in particular:
CrisisCamp Haiti, OpenStreetMap, Ushahidi, and GeoCommons.
This analysis demonstrates that ITs were a key means through
which individuals could make a tangible difference in the
work of relief and aid agencies without actually being
physically present in Haiti. While not without problems,
this effort nevertheless represents a remarkable example of
the power and crowdsourced online mapping and the potential
for new avenues of interaction between physically distant
places that vary tremendously.
2009
America Online volunteers :
Lessons from an early co-production community, byHector Postigo, in the International
Journal of Cultural Studies 2009. This article continues
previous work that analysed the case of America Online (AOL)
volunteers from critical perspectives of immaterial and free
labor, and incorporates newly acquired documents and
interviews by the United States Department of Labor (DOL) with
volunteers. Specifically, this article puts forth the AOL
volunteers’ case as an instance of co-production that
eventually met its demise when organizational changes resulted
in the rise of a labor consciousness among some volunteers
that made the ongoing relationship impossible. This article
shows the types of co-productive labor that took place during
the height of the AOL/volunteer relationship and the
structures put in place to help AOL harness the power of a
free distributed workforce. The research posits that the
success of the co-productive relationship was a function of a
balance between a numbers of elements: (1) the perceived
reasonable compensation on the part of volunteers, (2) social
factors and attitudes towards work such as a sense of
community, creativity, and (3) a sense of accomplishment.
E-Mentoring for All, by
Carmit-Noa Shpigelman, Patrice L. (Tamar) Weiss, Shunit
Reiter. Department of Special Education, Faculty of Education,
University of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Haifa 31905, Israel and
Department of Occupational Therapy, Faculty of Social Welfare
& Health Sciences, University of Haifa, Israel. This paper
presents the results of a study that evaluated an electronic
mentoring intervention program designed to provide social and
emotional support for protégés with disabilities by mentors
who also have disabilities. Using a primarily qualitative
research design, the study characterized the electronic
mentoring process and its contributions to this population.
The findings provided support for the potential of electronic
mentoring for personal development and empowerment of youth
with special needs. Furthermore, the findings supported the
usability and utility of the e-mentoring intervention based on
a conceptual framework that characterized an electronic
support process for people with special needs. Implications
for implementing feasible electronic mentoring programs are
discussed. Computers in Human Behavior. 01/2009
Carmit-Noa Shpigelman,
Reiter, S., & Weiss, P. L. (2009a). A conceptual framework
for electronic socio-emotional support for people with special
needs.International Journal of Rehabilitation Research,
32, 301-308. doi: 10.1097/MRR.0b013e32831e4519
Quando a ajuda chega por
mail: o voluntariado online como oportunidade e realidade
by Alcides A. Monteiro,
Doutor em Sociologia, Universidade da Beira Interior (UBI).
"Escassamente (re)conhecido em Portugal, o voluntariado online
(ou voluntariado virtual) é hoje uma opção já seguida por
muitas organizações da sociedade civil, encarado não só como
forma de cooptar novos voluntários (jovens, reformados,
profissionais e pais de família), mas também de satisfazer
necessidades emergentes no seio dessas organizações (nos
domínios da tradução, da assessoria, do desenho de projectos
ou do e-learning). Distingue-se num tal panorama, não só pela
credibilidade da organização mas também pela sua abrangência,
a iniciativa de voluntariado online desenvolvida pelas Nações
Unidas e a partir da qual se estabelece uma definição
'oficial' para esta nova dimensão do voluntariado: 'tarefas
completadas, no seu todo ou em parte, via Internet a partir de
casa, do trabalho, da universidade, de um cibercafé ou
telecentro'. À luz das experiências já desenvolvidas um pouco
por todo o mundo e documentadas online, o presente texto visa
enunciar as condições de adopção de projectos de idêntica
natureza por parte das organizações do Terceiro Sector em
Portugal, a partir das oportunidades e constrangimentos que
rodeiam o voluntariado online." Vi Congresso Português de
Sociologia. Mudons Socias: Saberes e Prácticas. Universidade
Nova de Lisboa. Faculdade de Ciências Socias E Humanas. 25 -
28 June 2008.
"Potential and promise of
online volunteering" by Yair Amichai-Hamburger, Bezeq
International Research Center for Internet Psychology, Sammy
Ofer School of Communications, Interdisciplinary Center,
Israel. 2008. Published in Computers in Human
Behavior24(2). "Advocates a model to explain the potential
and promise of online volunteerism from the perspective of
the volunteer." Primarily anecdotal information and
hypothesis.
2007
Why Do People Write Free
Documentation? Results of a Survey, published in June
2007, by Andy Oram. "A unique
survey ran on O'Reilly's web site during the first three
months of 2007, aimed at people who contribute free
documentation to online mailing lists, web sites, and other
forums. The survey garnered 354 responses, which in itself
indicates the thriving state of free documentation and the
dedication of the people who write it… Thousands edit wikis,
answer questions on forums, and blog about experiments with
technology--mostly for free. Their contributions may go on
sites that are advertising-supported, but they rarely share in
the revenue. Some receive fees elsewhere for articles and
books, but the writing done gratis often comes up in search
engines at rankings equal to or higher than official corporate
sites such as Sun Microsystems' Java documentation."
"Online Volunteers:
Knowledge Managers in Nonprofits," by Ismael
Peña-López. Published inThe Journal of Information
Technology in Social Change, Spring Edition - April 2007.
Analyzed 17 web sites devoted to fostering volunteering to
find out (a) if there was a broadly accepted definition of
the concept of online volunteering and (b) if there was a
list of tasks thus designed as the core or ideal
competencies of online volunteers.
"Voluntary Engagement in an
Open web-based Encyclopedia : Wikipedians, and Why They Do It"
by Joachim Schroer, Guido Hertel, University of Würzburg, 8
January 2007. Available fromtexte intégral en ligne
"What Motivates
Wikipedians?" by Oded Nov. Printed in the Communications of
the ACM in November 2007. Association for Computing Machinery.
Available from http://faculty.poly.edu/~onov/Nov_Wikipedia_motivations.
This study focused on online volunteers who contribute
information to the English version of Wikipedia on an ongoing
basis: people who had created a user page on the site, in
addition to contributing information to other pages, were
asked to complete a web-based survey. 151 people responded. On
average, respondents have been contributing content to
Wikipedia 2.3 years, and the average level of contribution was
8.27 hours per week. Overall, the top motivations for their
continued volunteering online for Wikipedia were "fun"
(volunteering as an opportunity to undertake an enjoyable
activity) and "ideology" (a passion for the mission of the
organization). Motivations related to meeting and engaging
with friends online or related to career exploration or skills
development were not found to be strong motivations for
contribution.
Hacia
una cooperación en red: el caso del voluntariado virtual.
By Carlos E. Jiménez Gómez. 2007. ABSTRACT: Son muchos los
ámbitos en los que se ha puesto de manifiesto la utilidad de
lasTIC. Esta comunicación aborda uno de ellos, la cooperación
al desarrollo, haciendoreferencia, en concreto, a las
potencialidades del trabajo en red que el interesanteconcepto
de voluntariado virtual presenta. Para ello, en primer lugar,
se profundiza en elsignificado de dicho término para, a
continuación, analizar algunos de los factores
mássignificativos a la hora de diseñar e implantar iniciativas
de voluntariado virtual (a saber,infraestructura, gestión del
capital humano, habilidades de dirección, planificación
ygestión de proyectos y cultura tecnológica). Se termina con
la presentación de dos casosexitosos que subrayan la
importancia de las variables presentadas.
Before 2007
"Online mentoring: the
promise and challenges of an emerging approach to youth
development." by Rhodes JE1, Spencer R, Saito RN, Sipe CL.
Lead by MENTOR/National Mentoring Partnership with America
Online, People magazine, PowerUP and the Waitt Family
Foundation, this online mentoring program, the Digital Heroes
Campaign (DHC), brought together 242 youth with online mentors
over a two-year period, beginning in 2000. Survey, focus
group, and interview data, in addition to analyses of the
e-mails that pairs exchanged, were examined in order to assess
the nature, types, and quality of the relationships that were
formed. Despite youths' generally positive self-reports, deep
connections between mentors and mentees appeared to be
relatively rare. The findings suggest that online mentoring
programs face significant challenges and that further research
is needed to determine under what conditions online mentoring
is likely to be most effective. The Journal of Primary
Prevention. 2006 Sep;27(5):497-513. Available for purchase
fromSpringer, or through a
university or library access from a database such as throughProQuest.
"Involving International
Online Volunteers: Factors for Success, Organizational
Benefits, and New Views of Community," by Jayne Cravens, MSc. In
conjunction with theInstitute for
Volunteering Research's November 2005 conference,
"Volunteering Research: Frontiers and Horizons," this
research, the first done regarding Online Volunteering in
quite a while, was undertaken to assess current common
practices among organizations successfully involving
international online volunteers; to explore the role online
volunteering may play in building a more cohesive global
community; and to assess the relationship between involving
online volunteers and building organizational capacities. This
paper offers a brief history and overview of online
volunteering practice and details survey results regarding
organizations that involved the Outstanding Online Volunteers
of 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005 at www.onlinevolunteering.org.
This paper was published inThe International Journal of Volunteer
Administration (IJOVA) in July 2006.
“Good Medicine: Better Health
by Volunteering Online” by Dr. Natalie Hruska, 2006.
Volunteer activity among different age groups is compared. A
discussion on the relationship between altruism and individual
well-being follows. Then, the contributions of volunteer
activity to social capital are explored. On-site volunteer
activity is compared and contrasted with online volunteer
activity. Finally, individual motives for volunteer activity
are identified, as well as how these motives are best served
in a volunteer program.
“Informal Communication in an Online
Volunteer Community: Implications for Supporting Virtual
Relationships." Susan R. Fussell and Leslie D. Setlock,
Human-computer Interaction Institute, Carnegie Mellon
University, USA. March 13, 2003. Abstract. This paper
considers the ways in which proximity benefits informal
communication and relationship development and how
technologies can create virtual proximity. We present an
“encounters” framework for understanding how proximity shapes
opportunities for interpersonal communication and relationship
development and then examine how dimensions of encounters
influence informal communication in an online chatroom-based
volunteer community. The results suggest that many of the
dimensions of encounters we propose influenced informal
communication and relationship development among members of
the community. The results further suggest that the ability to
experience sounds and images simultaneously, through shared
web pages, files, and other devices, was important for
relationship-building. We conclude with a discussion of areas
for future research, including enhancing the encounters
framework, understanding how affordances of media shape
interpersonal encounters, extending the work to other online
communities, and the development of new research paradigms.
From
Traditional to Virtual Mentoring. Kirk, James J.;
Olinger, Jennifer. 2003-Jan-6. Abstract: The tradition
of a mentoring relationship is embedded in a personal/business
relationship between a wise teacher and someone who needs to
learn a trade. Learning sessions have occurred over the years
in many types of settings, including one-on-one mentoring,
conferences, meetings, telephone, and fax. As society looks to
technology as a vital resource in everyday life, virtual
mentoring has emerged. Traditional mentoring is face-to-face
communication and synchronous; time and location of mentoring
can be an issue; it is all personal touch and communication,
can be expensive, and is not recorded so it can be
confidential. Virtual mentoring is communication via computer
and asynchronous; time and location are not issues; there is
no personal touch or communication, can be inexpensive, and is
recorded so it cannot be confidential. Well-established
virtual mentoring programs for adults can offer a starting
point for individuals and organizations seeking virtual
mentoring opportunities and information. Examples are HighTech
Women; Ask the Employer.com; Nursing Net; Intel Corporation;
Piver and Associates Civil Engineering Firm; CanadaInfoNet;
Mentors in American Philanthropy; MentorNet; General Electric;
Smart Mentoring Group; MIT; C.E.O. Mentor; Lincoln Financial
Group; The Virtual Volunteering Project; and WEPAN. (Contains
33 references)
"Virtual Volunteering: Current
Status and Future Prospects", by Yvonne Harrison and Vic Murray, published in
Emerging Areas of Volunteering by ARNOVA in
2005. Other articles by these authors include a chapter,
"Bridging the Effectiveness Divide: The Case of Online
Recruitment in Canada," in the bookNonprofits and Technology:
Emerging Research for Usable Knowledge, edited by Cortes and
Rafter, 2007; a summary of the research carried out by
Harrison, Murray and Jim MacGregor on the impact of
information and communications technology on the management of
Canadian volunteer programs, featured inThe Canadian Journal
of Volunteer Resources ManagementVol. 12, No. 2, 2004;
"Information and Communications Technology: Navigating
Technological Change and Changing Relationships in Volunteer
Administration," the lead article in theJournal of Volunteer
Administration, Vol. 22, No. 3, 2004; "The Use and
Effectiveness of Information and Communications Technology in
the Management of Volunteer Programs", (2004); "The Impact of
ICT on the Management of Canadian Volunteer Programs:
Information and Communications Technology: Beyond Anecdotes,
(2004); "Virtual Volunteering in Canada Fact Sheet 2002"; "The
Impact of Information and Communications Technology on
Volunteer Management" (2002); and "Virtual Volunteering:
Current Status and Future Prospects", regarding online
volunteering in Canada (2002).
Power to the Edges: Trends and Opportunities
in Online Civic Engagement- Final Edition 1.0 - May 6,
2005, by Jillaine Smith, Martin Kearns and Allison Fine. This
paper explores trends and strategies related to the current
(as of May 2005) and future state of online activism,
fundraising, and democracy. It draws on a review of articles,
studies, online discussions, and interviews with 19 leaders in
the fields of online technologies, nonprofit capacity
building, citizen engagement and social networks. By civic
engagement, the authors mean "activities by which people
participate in civic, community and political life and by
doing so express their commitment to community." The authors
stress that "online engagement does not preclude, exclude or
even dilute the need for "on land" (or offline) engagement
such as house parties and door-to-door canvassing.
Rather...traditional forms of engaging citizens remain the
most effective for connecting and organizing. The relationship
between online and offline citizen engagement requires a
constant flow back and forth that balances the need for scale
with the need for the intensity and personal connection that
comes from in-person gatherings and activities." Authors also
note that: "New models of civic engagement require a different
set of benchmarks, skills and training. In fact, the changes
have very little to do with technology or the Internet and
everything to do with building entirely new organizational
cultures." The report concludes with a series of findings and
recommendations of the ways that organizations, individuals,
and philanthropic groups can help build such cultures. This
43-page paper was commissioned by the USA-based Philanthropy
for Active Civic Engagement (PACE).
Lessons
from onlinevolunteering.org, 2001 - 2005. A compilation
of material from the UN's Online Volunteering service,
formerly a part of NetAid, from 2001 - 2005. The resources
including testimonials from host organizations and online
volunteers from 2002 to 2005, an article providing user
statistics as of April 2004, case studies about online
volunteering projects, and support materials for the OV
service.
Leading
and motivating virtual teams in volunteer organizations,
by Andrew Wong. 2004. In partial fulfillment of the
requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Management
Graduate Management Program The Center for Creative Change
Antioch University Seattle. This paper is an inquiry into the
challenges associated with leading and motivating virtual
teams in volunteer organizations: challenges in communication
due to distance, time, and cultural diversity, and challenges
in technology due to technical abilities, equipment costs, and
meeting base technology requirements. Following a review of
how these challenges should be considered, the author
concludes that the traditional approach in leadership when
combined with the special considerations that are required to
lead virtual teams will produce effective virtual teams that
can maintain their effectiveness through to the end of their
purpose.
Why
open source software can succeed. Bonaccorsi, A., &
Rossi, C. (2003). 1243–1258. This paper finds that open source
software, developed mostly by volunteers (unpaid), is often of
superior quality to the software developed by one of the most
powerful companies in the history of the world employing
unquestionably extremely intelligent people. The focus of this
paper is on three key economic problems raised by the
emergence of Open Source: motivation, co-ordination, and
diffusion.
Free/Libre and Open Source
Software: Survey and Study FLOSS, Deliverable D18: FINAL
REPORT Part IV: Survey of Developers. By Rishab Aiyer Ghosh,
Ruediger Glott, Bernhard Krieger, Gregorio Robles, Published
in June 2002 by the International Institute of Infonomics,
University of Maastricht and Berlecon Research GmbH, The
Netherlands. The survey and study included several questions
about the motivations of unpaid contributors to contribute to
FLOSS projects. According to the study, more than 78% of 2,784
FLOSS survey respondents indicated that the reason why they
volunteered for FLOSS projects was to “learn and develop new
skills”. The second most popular reason was to “share my
knowledge and skills” (49.8%), followed by the motivation to
“participate in a new form of cooperation” (34.5%). In answer
to the question about why they continue to be involved in
FS/OS development, the percentage of respondents who cited the
desire to “share my knowledge and skills” increased to 67.2%.
The motive to “learn and develop new skills” was still the
most prevalent (70.5%), followed by the desire to “improve
FS/OS products of other developers” (39.8%) and “participate
in a new form of cooperation” (37.2%). Available from http://www.flossproject.org/report/Final4.htm
"Social Movement
Participation in the Digital Age: Predicting Offline and
Online Collective Action," by Suzanne Brunsting and Tom
Postmes. Published inSmall Group
Research, vol. 33, issue 5, October 2002 "Motives
to participate in online versus offline collective action were
investigated among environmental activists in the
Netherlands... This research gives an empirical insight in the
influence of Internet on motives for collective action and on
the participation of peripheral members."
Handheld computer
technologies in community service/volunteering/advocacy:
This was a pioneering article, published in October 2001 and
researched and written by Jayne Cravens. It provides early
examples of volunteers/citizens/grass roots advocates using
handheld computers, then called personal digital assistants
(PDAs), or cell phones (pre-smart phones) as part of community
service/volunteering/advocacy, or examples that could be
applied to volunteer settings. It was part of the United
Nations Information Technology Service (UNITeS) online
knowledge base.
Technology-Assisted
Delivery of School Based Mental Health Services: Defining
School Social Work for the 21st Century, which was
co-published simultaneously as the Journal of
Technology in Human Services, Volume 21,
Numbers 1/2 2003, by The Haworth Press, featured a paper byJayne Cravens, Online Mentoring:
Programs and Suggested Practices as of February 2001.
Human Services Online: A
New Arena for Service Delivery, which was co-published
simultaneously as the Journal of Technology in
Human Services, Volume 17, Numbers 1 and 2/3
2000, by The Haworth Press, featured a paper by Jayne Cravens, "Virtual Volunteering:
Online Volunteers Providing Assistance to Human Service
Agencies."
Guía del Voluntariado
Virtualde Susan Ellis y Jayne Cravens (traducida por
los miembros de E-Voluntas). Published in 2002, based on the
English book published in 2000. Original web site was herehttp://www.sumadevoluntades.org/summa/evoluntas/index.jspbut
this site is no longer affiliated with E-Voluntas. The
material can be retrieved by cutting and pasting that original
web site address intoarchive.org, and looking
at the archive for May 2003. The direct link on archive.org
(which doesn't always work).
How Open Source Software
Works: "Free" User-to-User Assistance?, Eric von Hippel,
Karim Lakhani, MIT, Sloan School of Management, Sloan Working
Paper 4117-00, eBusiness@MIT Working Paper 132, May 2000.
Unpaid contributors to open source projects are rarely called
volunteers - this is usually called distributed
engagement. Yet, they have much in common with what we
think of traditionally as online volunteers, and the way these
unpaid contributors are constantly motivated and continually
involved across development levels is definitely something
from which nonprofits could learn.
Why telecollaborative
projects sometimes fail (PDF). A short case study by Dr. Judi Harris, then of
the University of Texas at Austin, regarding the pioneering
Electronic Emissary initiative, a curriculum-based online
tutoring program for high school students. From Learning &
Leading with Technology, Volume 27 Number 5, 2000,
International Society for Technology in Education.
If you know of a study, research project or
evaluation report regarding online volunteering, online activists,
online civic engagement, online mentoring, microvolunteering,
crowd-sourcing, or unpaid people contributing to open source
projects -- even at just one organization -- please contact Jayne,
with the name of the study or evaluation and a link for more
information (even if the entire report is not freely available
online). This can include informal evaluations of individual
programs.
If you are a university-based student or
faculty member researching any aspect of virtual volunteering, or
you are researching some aspect of virtual volunteering for an
academic or professional journal, please contact Jayne
with information about your research project.
Jayne and Susan also welcome information about research using
other terms, in addition to the ones already named, that are used
to talk about people doing work away from a work site, using
networked technologies, as employees, consultants or volunteers,
formally and informally, short-term or long-term. These concepts
may influence virtual volunteering practices. These terms include:
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The most comprehensive guide
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high-responsibility roles, crowd sourcing to benefit
nonprofits and other mission-based organizations, and
much more.
Published January 2014, based on more than 30 years of
research.
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The most comprehensive guide
available on virtual volunteering, including online mentoring,
micro-volunteeirng, virtual teams, high-responsibility roles,
crowd sourcing to benefit nonprofits and other mission-based
organizations, and much more.
Published January 2014, based on
more than 30 years of research. Available as both a print
book and an ebook.