International labour organizationu2019s manual on the measurement of volunteer work






















ILO Manual on the Measurement of Volunteer Work | Page ii Preface This Manual on the Measurement of Volunteer Work is intended to guide countries in generating systematic and comparable data on volunteer work via regular supplements to labour force surveys. The objective is to improve and make available data on a significant form of work. In the decade since the publication of the International Labour Organization (ILO) Manual on the Measurement of Volunteer Work and the first State of the World’s Volunteerism Report in , progress on measurement has been steady, but limited. Over 95 countries have now measured volunteer work at least once. The International Labour Organization (ILO) was created by the Treaty of Versailles of to promote peace through social justice. Its Constitution calls for an improvement in employment conditions, such as the regulation of hours of work and of labour supply, the provision of an adequate living.


volunteer work in Europe and elsewhere. Second, we outline the approach taken for measuring the amount and value of volunteer work in the development of the Manual on the Measurement of Volunteer Work that the International Labour Organisation (ILO) recently issued for use in countries. Volunteers count. Their work deserves to be counted. The Agenda for Sustainable Development explicitly recognises volunteer groups as stakeholders to support grassroots implementation of the 17 Goals. And yet, statistics on volunteers, the work they do, the skills and time they contribute to improve the lives of others are, for the most. International Labour Organization's (ILO) Manual on the Measurement of Volunteer Work () and the standard-ized definitions adopted in the 19th International Conference of Labour Statisticans (), provide a common foundation to allow for more accurate estimates of the scope and composition of volunteerism worldwide. Draw-.


In the decade since the publication of the International Labour Organization (ILO) Manual on the Measurement of Volunteer Work and the first State of the World’s Volunteerism Report in , progress on measurement has been steady, but limited. Over 95 countries have now measured volunteer work at least once. Facts and Figures on Global Volunteer work. Manual on the measurement of volunteer work. This Manual on the Measurement of Volunteer Work is intended to guide countries in generating systematic and comparable data on volunteer work via regular supplements to labour force or other household surveys. The objective is to make available comparative cross-national.

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