Abstract
There are numerous reports on the rates of attrition among volunteers as a persistent challenge for organizations. In explaining volunteer attrition, researchers have predominantly: 1) provided an individualistic account of volunteering; 2) overlooked the interactional dimension of volunteer work and the crucial role of interpretation in its development; and 3) assumed commitment as a function of satisfaction with volunteering experience. Drawing on the theoretical insights of a symbolic interactionist approach, this article contends that volunteers’ role commitment hinges on their satisfaction with their interpretation of their interaction with clients, rather than the interaction itself. This perspective calls attention to the volunteer-client dyadic interaction, gives a prominent place to the social role and its definition, and draws attention to strategies used by volunteers to sustain challenging relationship with clients.
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Behnia, B. (2021). Role Commitment and Role Maintenance Strategies: A Symbolic Interactionist Approach to Volunteering. Canadian Journal of Nonprofit and Social Economy Research, 12(1), 23–37. https://doi.org/10.29173/cjnser.2021v12n1a370
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