Across the Generations

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A01=Adrian Webb
A01=Christine Farrell
A01=Roger Hadley
aged
Author_Adrian Webb
Author_Christine Farrell
Author_Roger Hadley
Category=JKSN
Central Office Services
Clearing House Work
Community Action Function
Community Organisation Work
Current Volunteers
elderly
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
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Independent School
Individual Volunteers
Intensive Model
intergenerational relationships
London
Longitudinal Survey
old people
People's Social Networks
People’s Social Networks
qualitative field study
relationships
School Volunteers
social care policy
social service evaluation
social services
Social Services Departments
social work
Statutory Social Services
Successful Relationships
Task Force
Task Force Centre
Task Force Office
Task Force Procedure
Task Force Staff
Task Force Volunteers
voluntary sector research
Voluntary Social Service
voluntary work
volunteer agencies
volunteer agency effectiveness assessment
Volunteer Organisation
Young Men
young people
Young Volunteers
youth engagement elderly

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032074658
  • Weight: 480g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Voluntary work is sometimes praised, sometimes criticised, but was seldom the subject of objective evaluation. Given the importance of the voluntary sector in the social services at the time, the lack of systematic research into its performance was cause for concern. Originally published in 1975, the particular value of this study was twofold: first it provided a detailed and vivid picture of the work of one section of the volunteer movement – young volunteers working with the elderly; second it examined the wider issue of how voluntary work can be evaluated. The particular volunteers studied were organised through Task Force, a London based agency, but both the substantive and research issues discussed had a far wider relevance. A key part of the study explored over a period of twelve months, the development of relationships between a group of old people and the volunteers allocated to them. The authors established a new method of assessing success in these relationships. They then explored possible reasons for the successes and failures in the relationships they studied. They suggest possible changes in the organisation of the work which might help to increase the success rate of volunteer agencies.

The book will be of interest to anyone concerned about the place of voluntary work in our society. At the time it would have been of special importance to staff and members of organisations involved in voluntary social service, to social workers and social administrators, and to those who were training to join their ranks.

The book is based on an eighteen-month field study of Task Force; Roger Hadley and Adrian Webb directed the research and Christine Farrell was the research officer for the project.

Roger Hadley, Adrian Webb, Christine Farrell

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