Narratives of Volunteering and Social Change in Wartime Ukraine

Author:

Boichak Olga1ORCID,McKernan Brian2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Sydney, Australia

2. Syracuse University, USA

Abstract

Ukraine’s efforts to resist the Russian invasion have sparked unprecedented levels of civic engagement. While the more tangible efforts to alleviate immediate needs have been prominently featured in mass media and elsewhere, the norms and values that shaped this large-scale collective effort often remain behind the scenes. Approaching narratives of volunteering through a critical cultural sociology lens, we find that wartime involvement constitutes a shift from duty-based norms in which citizens are required or expected to engage in civic activities, to forms of engaged citizenship which contribute not just to the state, but also to the wellbeing of those in need. In this context, volunteering facilitates the emergence of civil society that often occupies the space outside of the currently defined institutional contexts and works through the collective shaping and contestation of social norms and values. Documenting these dynamics provides valuable new insights into the important role volunteerism plays in broader sociopolitical transformations, especially in non-Western and postcolonial contexts where the processes of civil society development take many forms and may be easily overlooked.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Social Sciences,Cultural Studies

Reference46 articles.

1. Address by President of the Russian Federation (2014) President of Russia 18 March. Available at: http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/20603 (accessed 23 October 2022).

2. The Social Life of the State: Relational Ethnography and Political Sociology

3. Disavowing Politics: Civic Engagement in an Era of Political Skepticism

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