Civil society's impact on quality of life

The purpose of the article is to analyze the impact of three forms of involvement in organized civil society - as 'participant', as 'member' and as 'volunteer' - on self-assessed quality of life when checking for coherence between the three forms of participation. The a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of civil society 2023-01, Vol.19 (1), p.57-75
Hauptverfasser: Ibsen, Bjarne, Elmose-Østerlund, Karsten, Bundgaard Iversen, Evald, Høyer-Kruse, Jens, Lund Pedersen, Marlene Rosager
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container_end_page 75
container_issue 1
container_start_page 57
container_title Journal of civil society
container_volume 19
creator Ibsen, Bjarne
Elmose-Østerlund, Karsten
Bundgaard Iversen, Evald
Høyer-Kruse, Jens
Lund Pedersen, Marlene Rosager
description The purpose of the article is to analyze the impact of three forms of involvement in organized civil society - as 'participant', as 'member' and as 'volunteer' - on self-assessed quality of life when checking for coherence between the three forms of participation. The article is inspired by both Lim and Putnam's claim that close social networks around meaningful and identity-bearing activities increase self-assessed quality of life and Stebbins' claim that life satisfaction is an essential by-product of 'serious leisure'. This article utilizes data from a digital survey study conducted among adult citizens in Denmark, which 2514 citizens answered. The questionnaire contained a broad range of questions regarding participation in leisure activities, membership in associations, engagement in voluntary work, subjective life-satisfaction, self-assessed health and social background of the respondents. The statistical regression analysis shows a correlation between volunteering in general and self-assessed quality of life, but the correlation is relatively weak. However, the analysis does not show a significant correlation between the quality of life and membership in an association and participation in 'serious leisure'. Of the other variables included, self-assessed health, in particular, contributes to explaining the variation in self-assessed quality of life.
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source EBSCOhost Political Science Complete
subjects Citizens
Civil society
Coherence
Leisure
Life satisfaction
Membership
Participation
Quality of life
Recreation
Self evaluation
Social background
Social networks
Voluntary work
volunteering
title Civil society's impact on quality of life
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