A free resource for nonprofit
organizations, NGOs, civil society organizations,
charities, schools, public sector agencies & other
mission-based agencies
by Jayne Cravens
via coyotecommunications.com
& coyoteboard.com
(same web site)
Effective Volunteer Engagement:
Ethics in Volunteerism & Court-Ordered Community Service
If your organizations involves volunteers, you should also be
thinking regularly about the ethics of such. Involving people who
are not financially compensated for work that they do carries with
it regular questions and criticisms. Not many consultants
regarding volunteerism, managers of volunteers or researchers
regarding volunteerism are willing to explore the many
controversial issues regarding volunteer engagement, because it's
not easy and can attract a lot of negative attention. Exploring
ethics in volunteerism has not won me many friends.
Exploring ethics in volunteerism can help you avoid public
relations disasters later.
Ethics in Volunteerism &
Court-Ordered Community Service
- Court-ordered
community service
I have blogged about this regularly over the years, more
than any other consultant or practitioner regarding
volunteer engagement. I feel rather alone in talking about
this, in fact - there seems to be a reluctance by
organizations that promote volunteerism, by associations of
managers of volunteers and by managers themselves to talk
about people who undertake volunteer - UNPAID - service for
nonprofits and charities. I explore the volunteering
opportunities available to people sentenced to community
service by the court, if virtual volunteering can be an
option for them (it can), and how to best supervise and
support people online in virtual volunteering roles.
- Ethics
in volunteer engagement
The only volunteer management consultant I ever heard
address ethics in volunteer engagement in years' past was
Mary Merrill. When we lost Mary, we lost a hugely important
voice to discuss this topic. I've tried to start instigating
discussions about ethics in volunteer engagement on my blog
and on various online communities in which I participate. In
addition, there are certain kinds of activities branded as
“volunteering” that I find unethical and that I regularly
research, blog about and talk about on social media:
- Voluntourism, where unskilled Westerners go
abroad to “volunteer” – usually for a fee – and do work
that either isn’t something local people see as a
priority or is something local people would like to be
paid for, and there is no screening for the volunteers:
whoever can pay the fee gets to go.
- Paying to volunteer in any capacity in a program that
seems to be more about giving an individual money than
about actually serving a community or cause.
- Companies that charge a fee for a letter that says a
person engaged in volunteering that the person uses to
fulfill court-ordered volunteering.
- Volunteer
Bill of Rights – a commitment by a host organization to
volunteers
Should organizations put their commitment to the volunteers
they involve in writing? Should they have a written
statement that says they believe that volunteers have the
right to work in a safe environment, to be treated with
respect by all staff members, to be told what impact
volunteer service has had on the community, to be trusted
with confidential information necessary to carry out an
assignment, to be kept informed about relevant matters
within the organization, to expect that their time will not
be wasted because of poor planning or poor coordination by
the organization, etc.? Why wouldn't an organization make
such a commitment? This blog explores reasons behind
creating such a document at your organization and provides
examples of such.
- I won't help you recruit a
receptionist/volunteer coordinator
Yes, I was asked to help do this. I refused.
- Learning From The
'Not-So-Nice' Volunteers: we have a lot to learn
from the "not-so-nice volunteers", the people who are
putting their time and energy into defending human rights,
addressing social ills, and battling institutions who they
feel are attacking their quality of life or an element of
their community that they treasure. And we have a lot to
learn from the people who manage such volunteers.
- Why Should the Poor
Volunteer? It's Time To Re-Think the Answer
Editorial: When volunteering is so often presented
just one way -- as a state-sanctioned free labor activity --
reluctance and even hostility by the unemployed, the
cash-strapped and the disenfranchised are completely
justified. If governments and donors want volunteerism
campaigns in poor communities to lead to more volunteering,
they must radically update their message.
- The Value of Volunteers
Involving volunteers because of a belief that they are
cheaper than paying staff is an old-fashioned idea that's
time should long-be-gone. It's an idea that makes those who
are unemployed outraged, and that justifies labor union
objections to volunteer engagement. This kind of valuation
of volunteer service is called "replacement value of labor
costs" - literally, volunteer service replacing the need to
pay employees or consultants (labor). It's a misguided model
fully embraced and promoted by the Points of Light
Foundation and the United Nations.
- Ethics
of paying to volunteer online
It is not unusual, nor automatically unethical, for a
program to charge people who want to participate as a
volunteer in a program. This blog explores some of the
reasons nonprofits ask volunteers to pay a fee - but it also
explores what unreasonable fees look like and warns against
nonprofits that are more concerned with making money that
engaging volunteers for the right reasons.
- Initiatives opposed to
some or all volunteering (unpaid work), & online
& print articles about or addressing controversies
regarding volunteers replacing paid staff
This is a list of organizations and initiatives opposed to
some kinds of volunteering (unpaid work), or ALL kinds of
volunteering, including unpaid internships at nonprofit
organizations / charities. It is also a list of online and
print articles about or addressing controversies regarding
volunteers replacing paid staff. Most of the links are to
initiatives or actions in Europe or the USA. It is not a
comprehensive list, but it's meant to show just how
pervasive - and, perhaps growing - the push back against
volunteer engagement is. This list has been compiled to help
researchers regarding volunteerism, as well as for policy
makers and volunteerism advocates who want to avoid these
kinds of controversies at nonprofit organizations and
government agencies. This list is also compiled to refute
those who believe that there are no such controversies
(believe it or not, those people DO exist)..
- Nonprofits
& governments programs rejecting staff per social
media activities
In 2006 and 2008, there was a thread on the TechSoup
Community forum that I think is worth saving. It took a
while to find on archive.org, but I did! The original
subject for this discussion was rejecting a volunteer per
online activity/online profile, but it grew into talking
about employees and candidates for employment as well. Here's most of
the thread.
- The Pitfalls of Having a
Program Sponsor
(and suggestions for mission-based organizations on how to
avoid them)
For-profit companies, particularly large corporations, often
sponsor specific programs at mission-based organizations
(non-profit organizations, non-governmental
organizations/NGOs, civil society, school, etc.), providing
funding, donated staff time, and in-kind equipment and
services to help launch and maintain a program. In most
ways, this is a blessing for the mission-based organization.
But there are often hidden costs that lead to frustrations
for everyone involved. This is a
list of some of those hidden costs, and ways they can be
avoided.
- Magical paychecks
How paychecks don't somehow improve safety and
confidentiality - in other words, employees aren't
automatically safer, more responsible or better at adhering
to confidentiality than volunteers.
- When to NOT pay interns
The title is purposely provocative - read it before you
write me to complain that I don't think interns should be
paid.
You can see all
of my blogs related to ethics here, including blogs
regarding voluntourism. This includes:
Also see my opinion-pieces and
observations about volunteerism and volunteer engagement.
Return to
this web site's index of volunteer
engagement-related resources
And also have a look at:
The Last Virtual
Volunteering Guidebook:
Fully Integrating Online Service Into Volunteer Involvement.
A comprehensive guide to using online tools for
supporting & engaging ALL volunteers, & for creating
online roles & online tasks for volunteers.
The Ultimate Guide to Setting Up Virtual Volunteering At Any
Organization.
Here's how to order
(includes table of contents and reviews).
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