Weave: Österreich - Belgien - Deutschland - Luxemburg - Polen - Schweiz - Slowenien - Tschechien
Disciplines
Economics (100%)
Keywords
Volunteer,
Network,
Belgium,
Austria
Abstract
Public and nonprofit organizations are increasingly relying on social networks of volunteers and paid
staff for social service delivery. That means that volunteers and paid staff collaborate on a daily basis
to provide public services. For these collaborations, they rely on personal connections with other
volunteers and paid staff. The combinations of all these personal connections form a social network
between all collaborators involved. This social network is relevant to reach more effective public
services. In this project, we analyze how different types of networks and different positions in those
networks are relevant in steering the effectiveness of the public services.
We rely on social network analysis to advance theoretical and practical knowledge on (1) the
structure of networks as well as the positions in networks of volunteers and paid staff, and (2) how
volunteers and paid staff use their social networks to reach more effective social services. Our
project has a strong empirical component. Given the nature of our research questions, we apply
quantitative and qualitative research methods, including interviews, social network analysis, Q-
sorting interviews, and conjoint experiments. The planned research will contribute through the
interdisciplinary collaboration of scholars involved in this project to the literature on social
networks, social work, and volunteer management.