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Journal of Applied Gerontology
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Volunteering as a Productive Aging Activity: Incentives and Barriers to Volunteering by Australian Seniors

Jeni Warburton

University of Queensland

Jessica Paynter

University of Queensland

Andrea Petriwskyj

University of Queensland

Recent research demonstrates that involvement in productive activities, particularly volunteering, has important societal and individual benefits in the contemporary aging environment. However, less attention has been paid to the structural dimension of volunteering or what encourages or discourages older people regarding volunteering. The authors present the findings from a two-phase Australian case study that explores the incentives and barriers to volunteering by those aged 50 and older, all members of a national seniors organization. Results suggest that governments and organizations need to consider many issues if more seniors are to be attracted to volunteering. Ensuring appropriate incentives to encourage volunteering was viewed as particularly important, with incentives including the need for more training, more flexible and diverse options, and more opportunities for intergenerational volunteering. Potential barriers included negative perceptions of volunteer activities, fear of encountering ageism, and concerns about the increasingly regulatory organizational environment.

Key Words: volunteering • seniors • productive aging • aging policy

Journal of Applied Gerontology, Vol. 26, No. 4, 333-354 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0733464807304568


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K. Hank and M. Erlinghagen
Dynamics of Volunteering in Older Europeans
Gerontologist, August 7, 2009; (2009) gnp122v1.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]