«Volunteering and Communication is a rich and valuable volume for those study-ing the volunteer experience, working
with volunteer programs, and orienting volunteers. This seminal work offers an excellent introduction to the topic, research
on a fabulous array of non-profits (e.g., Big Brothers Big Sisters, CERT, Peace Corp, Red Cross), and applications of well-established
theories (e.g., Uncertainty Reduction, Structuration Theory, social exchange theories), and concepts (burnout, belongingness).
This is a superb volume on the volunteer experience that will spark new research ideas and inspire best practices.» (Becky
L. Omdahl, Metropolitan State University, Minneapolis)
«A wonderful surprise! Here’s a book that volunteer management
practitioners will find insightful and often practical, as well as grounded in scholarly research, which uniquely applies
the perspective of communication theory to volunteering. The academics often were surprised at their findings about real-life
volunteering in many settings; leaders of volunteers will be surprised at what this mysterious ‘communication theory’ stuff
can do to strengthen our support of volunteers. I encourage my colleagues to explore how metaphors, narratives, relationship
studies, and more can help us understand volunteer motivation and actions, and contribute to how we interview, place, orient,
train, and work effectively with volunteers of all sorts. Don’t let this book sit on the shelf in the communications department.
Find the right audience for each chapter and share the information widely.» (Susan J. Ellis, President, Energize, Inc., Trainers
and Publishers in Volunteerism)
«This edited volume is a sterling and unique contribution to understanding how we can
grapple with problems and potentials of volunteering and civic engagement in an era of considerable social, political and
technological change. Instead of taking a standard theory-first approach to contemporary volunteering, Kramer, Lewis, and
Gossett have compiled eighteen contributions that focus significantly on the experience of volunteering in a multitude of
contexts. The studies themselves encompass a broad swathe of communicative issues such as uncertainty, dissent, belonging,
socialization, voice, and risk. The result is thus a creative, comprehensive, pragmatic, and wide-ranging compilation that
will not only shift the grounds of research for communication scholars interested in these issues, but will also be a substantial
resource for students, non-profit and community or-ganizations, policy makers, and crucially, volunteers themselves.» (Shiv
Ganesh, Massey University Albany, Auckland, New Zealand)
«Volunteering and Communication is a rich and valuable volume for those study-ing the volunteer experience, working
with volunteer programs, and orienting volunteers. This seminal work offers an excellent introduction to the topic, research
on a fabulous array of non-profits (e.g., Big Brothers Big Sisters, CERT, Peace Corp, Red Cross), and applications of well-established
theories (e.g., Uncertainty Reduction, Structuration Theory, social exchange theories), and concepts (burnout, belongingness).
This is a superb volume on the volunteer experience that will spark new research ideas and inspire best practices.» (Becky
L. Omdahl, Metropolitan State University, Minneapolis)
«A wonderful surprise! Here’s a book that volunteer management
practitioners will find insightful and often practical, as well as grounded in scholarly research, which uniquely applies
the perspective of communication theory to volunteering. The academics often were surprised at their findings about real-life
volunteering in many settings; leaders of volunteers will be surprised at what this mysterious ‘communication theory’ stuff
can do to strengthen our support of volunteers. I encourage my colleagues to explore how metaphors, narratives, relationship
studies, and more can help us understand volunteer motivation and actions, and contribute to how we interview, place, orient,
train, and work effectively with volunteers of all sorts. Don’t let this book sit on the shelf in the communications department.
Find the right audience for each chapter and share the information widely.» (Susan J. Ellis, President, Energize, Inc., Trainers
and Publishers in Volunteerism)
«This edited volume is a sterling and unique contribution to understanding how we can
grapple with problems and potentials of volunteering and civic engagement in an era of considerable social, political and
technological change. Instead of taking a standard theory-first approach to contemporary volunteering, Kramer, Lewis, and
Gossett have compiled eighteen contributions that focus significantly on the experience of volunteering in a multitude of
contexts. The studies themselves encompass a broad swathe of communicative issues such as uncertainty, dissent, belonging,
socialization, voice, and risk. The result is thus a creative, comprehensive, pragmatic, and wide-ranging compilation that
will not only shift the grounds of research for communication scholars interested in these issues, but will also be a substantial
resource for students, non-profit and community or-ganizations, policy makers, and crucially, volunteers themselves.» (Shiv
Ganesh, Massey University Albany, Auckland, New Zealand)