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This article looks at the long term impacts of volunteering at sporting events among young people with intellectual disabilities through interviews with the individuals and their parents.

This article serves as a follow-up on a previous study and looks at how volunteering at a major sporting event has affected the lives of a group of volunteers with intellectual disabilities two years after volunteering. The aim is to examine how volunteering at an Olympic event may be a source for lasting social value, operationalised as an increase in social capital and quality of life. Qualitative interviews were conducted on a selection of former volunteers with intellectual disabilities (n=8). In five of the interviews, parents of the interviewees also functioned as facilitators for the interviews. The same five parents were also interviewed in brief, semistructured interviews. This study shows that the event had a limited effect on bridging social capital, while having a stronger impact on the group's bonding social capital. Moreover, the event has affected the quality of life for the participants to various degrees by being a source for positive memories, enforced by visual reminders such as the volunteer uniform frequently worn by the former volunteers. The volunteer experience also serves as a bridging element, bringing together groups of people with little in common. In some cases, volunteering also led to employment in regular occupations.

Publisher

Tags

Norway
Europe
All sports
10 – Reduced inequalities
8 - Decent work and economic growth
People with Disabilities
Youth
https://www.sportanddev.org/research-and-learning/resource-library/lasting-social-value-or-one-people-intellectual-disabilities

Resource Details

SVG
Journal Articles
2019
Files
638.03 KB, pdf

Tags

Country
Norway
Region
Europe
Sport
All sports
Sustainable Development Goals
10 – Reduced inequalities
8 - Decent work and economic growth
Target Group
People with Disabilities
Youth