Sweden's Volunteering Rates Stay Stable Despite Predictions of Decline
A three-decade study of Swedish volunteers challenges the widespread assumption that civic engagement is collapsing. Instead of the predicted exodus, formal volunteering remained remarkably consistent from 1992 to 2024—a finding that reshapes how policymakers should think about civil society resilience and resource allocation.
Originaltitel: Volunteering in Sweden and the Discourse of Change: Historical Trends and Theoretical Explanations
Abstract Scholarship on volunteering often highlights transformations in civic engagement and their implications for democracy and social cohesion. This article examines one influential perspective—the discourse of change in volunteering—emphasizing declining participation, shifts in organizational preferences, and changing forms of engagement. We critically review this discourse with attention to the Scandinavian context and compare its claims with empirical evidence on formal volunteering in Sweden from 1992 to 2024. Drawing on cross-sectional survey data, we analyze trends in the scope, structure, forms, and values of volunteering. Contrary to narratives of decline or radical transformation, our findings indicate relative stability. To interpret these findings, we apply the theoretical perspective of the “reversed social engine” and argue that resilience offers a valuable yet underexplored lens for understanding civil society. This perspective shifts attention from change to stability as a phenomenon warranting further study.