Abstract
AbstractPrior research has suggested three explanations why levels of voluntary engagement rise and fall over time within societies. A social structural explanation considers individual resources crucial for engagement and argues that a redistribution of those resources may bring about changes in engagement. A cohort-based explanation considers socialisation and experiences in formative years as crucial for the uptake of engagement. Finally, a period-based explanation considers extraordinary events, external shocks, and crises to be crucial for engagement. So far, these explanations have mainly been tested separately and little is known about the relative strength of each of the proposed factors. Using data from a large German household panel survey that assessed engagement almost annually across four decades, we found that most social structural factors (e.g., education, employment, income) maintained their predictive effects for engagement, irrespective of cohort or period. The only notable exception was that the gender gap observed has narrowed substantially across periods and cohorts. Moreover, cohort effects were rendered almost negligible once we factored in periods. Taken together, our results suggest that individual characteristics and extraordinary events are the main factors influencing voluntary engagement rather than shared societal experiences of cohorts.
Funder
Berlin University Alliance
Deutsches Zentrum für Integrations- und Migrationsforschung
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Strategy and Management,Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science,Business and International Management
Reference62 articles.
1. Baldez, L. (2010). Women’s movements and democratic transition in Chile, Brazil, East Germany, and Poland. In M. Lena Krook & S. Childs Women (Eds.), Gender, and politics: A reader. Oxford University Press.
2. Bartels, K. P. R., Cozzi, G., & Mantovan, N. (2013). “The Big Society”, public expenditure, and volunteering. Public Administration Review, 73(2), 340–351.
3. Bell, A. (2020). Age period cohort analysis. A review of what we should and shouldn’t do. Annals of Human Biology, 47(2), 208–217.
4. Borbáth, E., Hunger, S., Hutter, S., Oana, I.-E. (2021). Civic and Political Engagement during the Multifaceted COVID-19 Crisis. Swiss Political Science Review: Special Issue: Covid-19 - A Political Science Perspective, 27(2), 311–324.
5. Burkhardt, L., & Schupp, J. (2019). Wachsendes ehrenamtliches Engagement: Generation der 68er häufiger auch nach dem Renteneintritt aktiv. DIW Wochenbericht, (42).
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献