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Researchers selected to work with United Nations on flagship report

5th December 2024

UN Volunteers logo.

Northumbria University has been selected as the lead research partner to work with United Nations Volunteers (UNV) on producing the next State of the World’s Volunteerism Report (SWVR). The flagship United Nations (UN) publication is designed to strengthen global understanding of volunteering, while demonstrating its universality, scope, and reach in the twenty-first century.

The forthcoming edition of the State of the World’s Volunteerism Report, SWVR 2026, will be led by researchers from Northumbria’s Centre for Global Development (CGD). The Centre is a world-leading research group connecting expert academics, practitioners, policy makers and students who work together to create knowledge, insights and awareness of key issues around volunteering, humanitarian crises and development.

Caption: Dr Bianca Fadel and Professor Matt Baillie Smith from Northumbria University.The report will focus on volunteer measurement, showcasing and analysing the latest thinking and evidence from across the world on the contributions of volunteers and volunteerism to peace and development. It will also include contributions from the University of Pretoria in South Africa and UNV's longstanding partner, the International Labour Organization (ILO).

Matt Baillie Smith, Professor of Global Development and Dean of Research Culture at Northumbria University, said: “How we measure volunteering and its impacts is critically important for many stakeholders. But because volunteering means different things to different people and organisations globally, understanding ways to measure it can present significant challenges. If we do not find ways to measure volunteering in ways that reflect this diversity, we can undervalue important work that is making a contribution to meeting global development challenges.

“By working with and bringing together researchers, practitioners and policy makers from across the world, the report will capture the multiple ways volunteering and its impacts can be measured. It will explore differences in definitions, in what is measured, and in the many approaches and methodologies used, including through practical case studies.

“We can’t wait to work with UNV and the other partners to help drive evidence-based approaches and meaningful change for volunteers, and the communities they work with.”

Caption: Volunteering builds inroads and supports communities. In this photo, UN Volunteers interview community members to assess basic health services in the rural areas of Rwanda.  Copyright UNV, 2023Among the questions the latest SWVR will seek to answer are: Is there a link between volunteering and the wellbeing of an individual? What is the value of volunteers to communities? How can we measure the value of volunteers to economic and social development in societies?

Dr Bianca Fadel, a researcher from Northumbria’s Centre for Global Development, said: “The Northumbria research team will work on the main research chapters focusing on volunteering measurement, drawing on our networks of global partners and researchers to ensure diverse perspectives and voices are reflected in the report. The International Labour Organisation will work on a chapter focusing on global volunteer estimates, and the University of Pretoria will produce the Volunteer Index Framework, both of which also be published as part of the SWVR.”

Tapiwa Kamuruko, Chief, Volunteer Advisory Services Section at UNV shared: "United Nations Volunteers is very excited to partner with academia for the next State of the World's Volunteerism Report 2026 – aimed at offering insights and approaches to measure the contributions and value of volunteering. We look forward to the research that will help answer important questions centring on linkages between volunteering and the wellbeing of an individual, and the value of volunteers to the economic and social development of their communities and societies."

Centre for Global Development logoNorthumbria University academics are creating a world-leading hub of research expertise, knowledge exchange and learning on volunteering in humanitarian crises and development contexts. Their work is supported through significant funding from UK research councils, leading global humanitarian agencies and NGOs in the UK and internationally.

Discover more here about Northumbria’s involvement in the State of the World’s Volunteerism Report (SWVR) 2026.

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