The decline of volunteering in the U.S explained
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Rebecca Nesbit, Ph.D. from the University of Georgia, and Laurie E. Paarlberg, Ph.D. from Indiana University – Indianapolis, initiate a discussion on the decline of volunteering in the United States. They emphasize the significance of this trend and suggest ways to address it
Volunteering is an important bedrock of democratic societies, but community context shapes citizens’ willingness and ability to volunteer. Our research examined the economic and social factors associated with the decline in volunteering in the United States (U.S.) in the 2000s and 2010s, particularly the Great Recession of 2008 (Paarlberg et al. 2022; Nesbit et al. 2025).
In2025,theU.S.isagainfacingeconomicuncertaintyandsocialunrest,andourresearchfindingscanhelpleadersunderstandtheimpactthatcurrenteconomicjoltsandsocialupheavalmayhaveonvolunteeringbehaviors.Inthisarticle,webrieflyhighlighttheprimaryfindingsfromtwoofourpublishedarticlesanddiscusswhatthosefindingsmeanforthefutureofvolunteering.Wealsomakerecommendationsforleadersandpolicymakerswhoareinterestedin