Motivations of volunteers in Danish grazing organisations

Research output: Working paperResearch

Standard

Motivations of volunteers in Danish grazing organisations. / Frank Madsen, Sari; Strange, Niels; Schou, Jesper Sølver.

Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2019.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Frank Madsen, S, Strange, N & Schou, JS 2019 'Motivations of volunteers in Danish grazing organisations' Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen. <https://econpapers.repec.org/RePEc:foi:wpaper:2019_09>

APA

Frank Madsen, S., Strange, N., & Schou, J. S. (2019). Motivations of volunteers in Danish grazing organisations. Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen. IFRO Working Paper No. 2019/09 https://econpapers.repec.org/RePEc:foi:wpaper:2019_09

Vancouver

Frank Madsen S, Strange N, Schou JS. Motivations of volunteers in Danish grazing organisations. Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen. 2019.

Author

Frank Madsen, Sari ; Strange, Niels ; Schou, Jesper Sølver. / Motivations of volunteers in Danish grazing organisations. Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen, 2019. (IFRO Working Paper ; No. 2019/09).

Bibtex

@techreport{1f59e7788ac342cc95ea624a05a7f123,
title = "Motivations of volunteers in Danish grazing organisations",
abstract = "Global biodiversity is under pressure from human activities, and despite the expansion of protected areas, investment in nature conservation and restoration, and allocation of economic resources for managing existing conservation is insufficient. Therefore, volunteers can play an important role as a resource in nature conservation projects if their recreational activities interact with the objectives of nature management. In recent years, the number of volunteers in conservation work has increased in Denmark, with more people volunteering to contribute to nature conservation projects. Ensuring that volunteers remain motivated and engaged is crucial to the success of such conservation projects. In this study, we evaluate the motivation among members of grazing organisations, an activity which represent the most prominent voluntary nature conservation initiatives in Denmark. We apply exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and ordinal regression to analyse survey data from 25 Danish grazing organisations. We find that five motivational factors are determining the engagement of the volunteers, namely social, nature value, instrumental, identification, and personal benefit. Whereas the social, nature value and personal benefit are factors also identified in the existing literature, the instrumental and identification factors add new perspectives to the motivation of environmental volunteers. We find that place attachment is an important driver, and that the chairpersons/coordinators of the grazing organisations especially emphasized the sharing of values and knowledge with their members as a driver. Last, volunteers were reluctant to support the idea of forming a more formal setup in terms of a “Grazing organisation union”.",
author = "{Frank Madsen}, Sari and Niels Strange and Schou, {Jesper S{\o}lver}",
year = "2019",
language = "English",
series = "IFRO Working Paper ",
number = "2019/09",
publisher = "Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Motivations of volunteers in Danish grazing organisations

AU - Frank Madsen, Sari

AU - Strange, Niels

AU - Schou, Jesper Sølver

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Global biodiversity is under pressure from human activities, and despite the expansion of protected areas, investment in nature conservation and restoration, and allocation of economic resources for managing existing conservation is insufficient. Therefore, volunteers can play an important role as a resource in nature conservation projects if their recreational activities interact with the objectives of nature management. In recent years, the number of volunteers in conservation work has increased in Denmark, with more people volunteering to contribute to nature conservation projects. Ensuring that volunteers remain motivated and engaged is crucial to the success of such conservation projects. In this study, we evaluate the motivation among members of grazing organisations, an activity which represent the most prominent voluntary nature conservation initiatives in Denmark. We apply exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and ordinal regression to analyse survey data from 25 Danish grazing organisations. We find that five motivational factors are determining the engagement of the volunteers, namely social, nature value, instrumental, identification, and personal benefit. Whereas the social, nature value and personal benefit are factors also identified in the existing literature, the instrumental and identification factors add new perspectives to the motivation of environmental volunteers. We find that place attachment is an important driver, and that the chairpersons/coordinators of the grazing organisations especially emphasized the sharing of values and knowledge with their members as a driver. Last, volunteers were reluctant to support the idea of forming a more formal setup in terms of a “Grazing organisation union”.

AB - Global biodiversity is under pressure from human activities, and despite the expansion of protected areas, investment in nature conservation and restoration, and allocation of economic resources for managing existing conservation is insufficient. Therefore, volunteers can play an important role as a resource in nature conservation projects if their recreational activities interact with the objectives of nature management. In recent years, the number of volunteers in conservation work has increased in Denmark, with more people volunteering to contribute to nature conservation projects. Ensuring that volunteers remain motivated and engaged is crucial to the success of such conservation projects. In this study, we evaluate the motivation among members of grazing organisations, an activity which represent the most prominent voluntary nature conservation initiatives in Denmark. We apply exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and ordinal regression to analyse survey data from 25 Danish grazing organisations. We find that five motivational factors are determining the engagement of the volunteers, namely social, nature value, instrumental, identification, and personal benefit. Whereas the social, nature value and personal benefit are factors also identified in the existing literature, the instrumental and identification factors add new perspectives to the motivation of environmental volunteers. We find that place attachment is an important driver, and that the chairpersons/coordinators of the grazing organisations especially emphasized the sharing of values and knowledge with their members as a driver. Last, volunteers were reluctant to support the idea of forming a more formal setup in terms of a “Grazing organisation union”.

M3 - Working paper

T3 - IFRO Working Paper

BT - Motivations of volunteers in Danish grazing organisations

PB - Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 231752668