Order this article individually from here or subscribe to e-Volunteerism for
just $40 to access all past and current articles.
Article
Preview
In 1980, VOLUNTEER: The National Center for Citizen Involvement (predecessor
of the Points of Light Foundation) published Exploring Volunteer Space:
The Recruiting of a Nation, by Ivan H. Scheier. As has been the case so
often with Ivan’s writing, the book was way ahead of its time and unfortunately
is now largely unknown. It is a joy to be able to use this “Voices from
the Past” feature section of e-Volunteerism to reintroduce new
readers to the very-much-still-relevant pages of Exploring Volunteer Space.
In the Introduction, Ivan says:
The further cultivation of volunteering
is the theme of this book; intensifying, energizing, and expanding it,
working out from today’s career leadership of volunteering. The core
is the director, coordinator or administrator of volunteer programs, plus
resource people and organizations at local, state and national levels.
These leaders number an estimated 70,000-80,000 people in the United States
today…Without this leadership, there would be no significant volunteer
movement for anyone to analyze here. Nevertheless, this leadership seems
thin on the line, because the volunteer helping army is far larger than
we suppose, and visible leadership, however, talented, shrinks drastically
in relation.
In the excerpt presented here, we share Ivan’s thoughts
on “Thick and Thin Leadership” – “Practical Issues
in Career Effectiveness.” Over time, we’ll revisit Exploring
Volunteer Space and give our readers more excerpts. And, since Ivan is
Consulting Editor for this journal (http://e-volunteerism.com/team/scheier.php),
we may even hear from him directly in response.
Other e-Volunteerism Articles
Subscribe to e-Volunteerism
This article was published in e-Volunteerism: The Electronic
Journal of the Volunteer Community. Subscribe
now to
access all the articles.