Unlabelled: For nonprofit organizations (NPOs) struggling to attract adequate numbers of volunteers, examining what makes nonprofit engagement meaningful is essential because disenchanted volunteers can simply quit. Yet, the assumption that freedom is a core aspect of the volunteer experience and of meaningful work may not hold true in high-stakes environments where volunteers must demonstrate high levels of commitment and expertise. This study aims to analyze how freedom plays out in high-stakes volunteering and its impact on meaningful work. Drawing on interviews with volunteer and paid ambulance crew working in nine stations in Aotearoa New Zealand, the study explores how "super-volunteers" talk about freedom in the context of their on-road work and how coworkers communicatively attempt to influence volunteers' freedom. Three volunteer profiles emerged from the analysis: ideal workers, supporting actors, and thrill seekers. Most paid staff encouraged ideal workers to strive for self-realization, a form of positive freedom work, which led to optimal clinical performance. Supporting actors privileged self-determination or positive freedom work, although coworkers successfully pushed them to contribute to basic emergency work. Because thrill seekers demanded freedom boring or dirty jobs, appeals to teamwork failed to sway them. The study makes two key contributions. First, the diversity of freedoms volunteers evoked and resisted underscores the importance of nuancing the assertion that volunteering is a "free" act. Second, although the meaningful work literature is drifting in the pro-freedom direction, it shows that the freedoms enacted by volunteers or promoted by coworkers were arguably "mistaken"-for volunteers, patients, and the NPO itself.
Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11266-024-00690-3.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11266-024-00690-3 | DOI Listing |
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Department of Emergency Medicine, Indiana University Health Inc, Indianapolis, United States.
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Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging (dMRI) sensitises the MRI signal to spin motion. This includes Brownian diffusion, but also flow across intricate networks of capillaries. This effect, the intra-voxel incoherent motion (IVIM), enables microvasculature characterisation with dMRI, through metrics such as the vascular signal fraction f or the vascular Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) D.
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March 2025
Center for General Practice at Aalborg University, Department of Clinical Medicine, Aalborg University, Selma Lagerløfs vej 249, Aalborg, 9260 Gistrup, Denmark, 45 29807944.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Contin Educ Health Prof
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Dr. Susan Kuhn: Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada; Dr. Lorelli Nowell: Associate Professor, Faculty of Nursing, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada; Dr. Chantelle Barnard: Clinical Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Cumming School of Medicine, Calgary, Canada; Dr. Elizabeth Oddone Paolucci: Professor, Departments of Community Health Sciences and Surgery, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada.
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