Volunteering in the Middle of Crisis and Politicization: the Role of Religiosity, Political Ideology, and Personal Experiences in Volunteerism Among Muslims and Christians During COVID-19
Published In
Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly
Document Type
Citation
Publication Date
7-23-2024
Abstract
Religion is a strong social identity cue that creates in-group and out-group identity. Yet individuals can harbor multiple identities, and a political ideology is another significant identity marker. Similarly, personal experiences with disease also create another social identity where individuals may feel part of the same social group as individuals who have experienced a similar adverse event. How do these identities intersect in an individual’s willingness to volunteer for individuals from and outside their faith during a crisis event? We attempted to answer this question using an original sample of Muslims and Christians and their willingness to volunteer for COVID-19-related causes. We find that stronger religiosity increases volunteering toward individuals in their faith group (in-group). However, conservative beliefs reduce volunteering toward causes outside of an individual’s faith community (out-group). We find that COVID-19 diagnosis increases volunteering, but only when an individual or their family member is hospitalized.
Rights
Copyright © 2024 by Association For Research On Nonprofit Organizations And Voluntary Action
Locate the Document
DOI
10.1177/08997640241258501
Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/42473
Citation Details
Noor, Z., Wasif, R., & Siddiqui, S. (2024). Volunteering in the Middle of Crisis and Politicization: The Role of Religiosity, Political Ideology, and Personal Experiences in Volunteerism Among Muslims and Christians During COVID-19. Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly.