Inequality in Older Volunteering: Association Between Volunteer Competency and Demographic Profiles.
Szu-Yu ChenKuei-Min ChenMeng-Chin ChenTzu-Yu LinLi-Ching YangFrank BelcastroPublished in: Journal of gerontological social work (2024)
The present survey research investigated older people's volunteering competency relating to social inequality by exploring the latent ability profile and demographic correlates of 1,000 older volunteers in 73 community care centersin southern Taiwan. Older volunteers were classified into advanced (n = 509), basic (n = 214), and novice (n = 277) groups. Demographics examined included: individualistic characteristics (religious beliefs), resources (education; number of chronic diseases), andsocial factors (serving area and spoken language, volunteering duration, marital status, and gender). Apparent inequality issues were revealed. The advanced group was better educated, Mandarin-speaking, and in urban areas. while the novice group featured the opposite (lower education Taiwanese-speaking suburban areas).