Exclusive: your first look at Australia?s new National Volunteering Strategy
Danielle Kutchel
In what?s believed to be a global first, the volunteering strategy has been co-designed with the sector and government.
Australia has a new National Volunteering Strategy, with a vision for volunteering to be ?the heart of Australian communities?.
Launched at Volunteering Australia?s 2023 National Volunteering Conference, the strategy is the culmination of 12 months of co-design with the volunteering sector and provides a blueprint for volunteering over the next ten years.
It comprises three key aims and 11 strategic objectives designed to reach those aims and fulfil the strategy?s vision of putting volunteering at the heart of the Australian community.
See more: Report finds challenges and opportunities for volunteering
COVID-19 had a particularly devastating impact on the sector, with the number of volunteers declining from 36 per cent of the population in 2019 to 26.7 per cent in 2022 ? a total of nearly two million fewer volunteers in 2022 compared to pre-pandemic levels.˜ Meanwhile, 83 per cent of volunteer involving organisations need more volunteers, and 11 per cent reported needing more than 101 volunteers in the short-term. Research underpinning the strategy found that volunteering is facing a sustainability crisis, with the report noting that although volunteering ?has always been a constant in Australian society? it ?has never achieved its full potential?.
See more: Data behind national volunteering strategy revealed
Successive crises have also impacted volunteering in Australia. While COVID-19 decimated volunteer numbers, the cost of living crisis is also creating challenges both for the work that volunteers do, and the ability of people to volunteer.
The heart of the community
The focus areas are:- Ensuring the volunteering experience is enhanced, and volunteering is safe, inclusive, accessible, meaningful, and not exploitative.˜
- Articulating and celebrating the diversity and impact of volunteering with a greater understanding of the value of volunteering to the community
- Ensuring the right conditions ? including policy, infrastructure and support ? are in place for volunteering to be effective and sustainable, and to thrive.
- Making volunteering a cross-portfolio issue for government;
- Reshaping public perceptions of volunteering, to inspire others and to improve awareness of volunteering;
- Recognising the importance of volunteer management and adequately resourcing the role; and
- Empowering and enabling communities to be drivers of how volunteering influences their futures, to ensure everyone who wants to volunteer can do so.
Co-design vital to success
Thousands of stakeholders took part in online consultations, interviews, participatory design workshops, working groups, surveys and a bespoke research project, all of which contributed to the design of the strategy, which provides a blueprint for the sector for the next decade. Speaking exclusively to Pro Bono News, Volunteering Australia CEO Mark Pearce said the consultation process that built the strategy was ?as broad as it was deep?. ?It took place over every part of Australia involving lots and lots of priority groups, cohorts, the entire volunteering ecosystem. And to be at that point now of being able to deliver a truly co-designed national strategy for volunteering to the ecosystem is extremely exciting.? It?s believed the strategy?s co-design is a global first. The diversity of feedback allowed for a granular level of detail, Pearce added, laying bare the hopes, opportunities and fears around Australia?s volunteering sector. ?It gives a real sense of where volunteering is. It gives a sense of what volunteering has achieved through its time and where it can go as a function of what has been a rapidly changing and significantly changed social, economic and cultural environment,? he said.Volunteering?s sustainability crisis
The strategy comes at a pivotal time for volunteering in Australia. The rate of formal volunteering in Australia has declined since 2010, from one third of adults in 2010 to one quarter of adults in 2022.See more: Report finds challenges and opportunities for volunteering
COVID-19 had a particularly devastating impact on the sector, with the number of volunteers declining from 36 per cent of the population in 2019 to 26.7 per cent in 2022 ? a total of nearly two million fewer volunteers in 2022 compared to pre-pandemic levels.˜ Meanwhile, 83 per cent of volunteer involving organisations need more volunteers, and 11 per cent reported needing more than 101 volunteers in the short-term. Research underpinning the strategy found that volunteering is facing a sustainability crisis, with the report noting that although volunteering ?has always been a constant in Australian society? it ?has never achieved its full potential?.
See more: Data behind national volunteering strategy revealed
Successive crises have also impacted volunteering in Australia. While COVID-19 decimated volunteer numbers, the cost of living crisis is also creating challenges both for the work that volunteers do, and the ability of people to volunteer.