INTRODUCTION
Volunteers are people who freely choose to give their time to organisations or groups in the community for no monetary reward (ABS 2007f). The activities they undertake can include assisting an organisation to run more smoothly (e.g. performing administration and fundraising tasks), providing information and advice (including counselling, teaching and coaching) as well as providing practical assistance to other people, such as serving food and helping with gardening and transportation. Sport benefits significantly from the input of volunteers, with sporting organisations relying heavily on volunteers to provide services for their members. According to New South Wales Sport and Recreation (2008), sport volunteers are the key to the success and long term sustain ability of sporting clubs, sport organisations and sport events. They also recognise that without this contribution, many sport organisations or individual clubs could not exist.
Voluntary work also helps to develop and reinforce social networks and cohesion within communities (Department of Sport and Recreation, Western Australia 2006). Volunteering has been seen to be particularly important in regional areas as it provides and sustains community interaction (Kemp 2006).
The 2006 General Social Survey (GSS) collected a range of information relevant to volunteers and sport. Information about the number of volunteers, their characteristics and motives for volunteering were collected together with a range of other information relating to community involvement, as well as involvement in sport and physical recreation.
A volunteer in the 2006 GSS was defined as someone who, in the previous 12 months, willingly gave unpaid help in the form of time, service or skills, through an organisation or group. Individuals who provided unpaid labour as part of work experience, study or mutual obligation were excluded. A detailed analysis of the characteristics of volunteers in sport and physical recreation is published in Volunteers in Sport, Australia, 2006 (cat. no. 4440.0.55.001).
People who volunteer may be involved with more than one organisation and more than one type of organisation. The data from the 2006 GSS provided detailed analysis of the characteristics of those who:
(a) volunteer for sport only, which includes sport and physical recreation organisation(s) only;
(b) volunteer for total sport, which includes sport and physical recreation and other types of organisation(s); and
(c) volunteer for other types of organisation(s) only.
This chapter presents data from the 2006 GSS and describes the characteristics of volunteers in sport and physical recreation. These characteristics include sex and age, family and household type, labour force status, the type of work undertaken as a volunteer and reasons for being a volunteer.