Abstract
This article uses charitable bingo to explore the sociolegal regulation
of volunteers. Using case studies of two provincial bingo revitalization
initiatives in Canada, I explore how charities and government officials
manage the tension between regulating and incentivizing volunteers. I show
that bingo revitalization plans in Alberta and Ontario increased
surveillance of nonregularized workers and failed to protect charity service
users from unpaid labor requirements. Moreover, revitalization initiatives
reframe the volunteer role to focus on customer service and explaining how
charities benefit the community. The potential for bingo volunteering to
promote spaces of mutual aid with players will thus likely decline. I
suggest that the allied power of charity and state over unpaid workers is
increasing, giving charities better‐protected interests in volunteer labor
and changing the tasks that volunteers do. The need for more research
exploring the interests of volunteers as regulatory stakeholders in their
own right is thus pressing.
Funder
Economic and Social Research Council
Alberta Gambling Research Institute, University of Alberta
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Law,General Social Sciences
Cited by
7 articles.
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