FACTOID # 169: Train spotters should go to Australia - Australians have more railway per capita than anyone else on the globe.
 
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Encyclopedia > Voluntary
This group of political volunteers is working to promote voter turn-out.
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This group of political volunteers is working to promote voter turn-out.

A volunteer [noun] is a person who performs or offers to perform a service out of his or her own free will, often without payment. The year 2001 was the International Year of the Volunteer.


People may volunteer [verb] to perform charitable work. Some volunteer for clinical trials or other medical research, and may even donate their bodies to science after their death.

Contents

Online Volunteer

An online volunteer is a person who contributes time and effort with an organization through an online connection, rather than in person. A wide variety of people from around the world are online volunteers and most are not technology professionals.


Online volunteers may provide advice, consultancy and perform remote administration tasks for the organisation, usually a charity or non-profit organisation. The practice of donating time online goes by other names, such as virtual volunteering, cyber service, telementoring, e-volunteering, and cyber volunteering.


There are many opportunities for people to donate their services using the internet. Online volunteers do a variety of tasks, such as translating documents, editing or preparing proposals, designing logos, researching information, developing strategic plans, reviewing budgets, creating web pages, designing flash presentations, moderating online discussion groups and managing other online volunteers.


ICT Volunteer

An ICT volunteer is someone who is working to foster the implementation and use of Information and Communication Technologies. He or she can install hardware, software or carry on with ICT training programmes. There is no need to be an online volunteer to be an ICT volunteer: installing hardware is a good example. Likewise, there is no need to be an ICT volunteer to be an online volunteer: teaching a language through a virtual campus is not related with ICT fostering, at least in a direct way.


Some organisations:

  • Geekcorps
  • United Nations Information Technology Service (UNITeS) [1] (http://www.unites.org/)
  • Digital Divide Network
  • NetCorps, only open for volunteers with holding Canadian citizenship [2] (http://www.netcorps-cyberjeunes.org/)

See also

External links

  • Volunteer Management System (http://www.civicactions.com/advokit)
  • UN Online Volunteering (http://www.onlinevolunteering.org)
  • The Virtual Volunteering Project (http://www.serviceleader.org/old/vv/)
  • Volunteer Rating System (http://www.affero.com/)

  Results from FactBites:
 
voluntaryist.com (1248 words)
Voluntaryism is the doctrine that relations among people should be by mutual consent, or not at all.
Voluntaryism does not argue for the specific form that voluntary arrangements will take; only that force be abandoned so that individuals in society may flourish.
Voluntaryism does not require of people that they violently overthrow their government, or use the electoral process to change it; merely that they shall cease to support their government, whereupon it will fall of its own dead weight.
Voluntary Sector Forum: Publications (4497 words)
It is important to understand that the voluntary sector does not act on behalf of itself and the organizations that comprise it, but rather on behalf of the individuals and groups of Canadians who benefit from the programs, services and research that it delivers.
Voluntary sector organizations bring their knowledge, expertise and compassion to the work that they do in communities, in public policy development and with government.
Voluntary sector organizations are experiencing significant increases in insurance premiums and a growing number and range of organizations are being refused coverage completely.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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