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Immigrants’ Experiences of Volunteering; A Meta-Ethnography

Abstract

Among policy makers and governments in the Global North, the voluntary sector is considered a central arena for immigrant integration. The aim of this interpretive synthesis was to systematically review research to understand immigrants’ volunteering experiences and explore how volunteering may influence immigrants’ health. A systematic literature review was performed using six databases. Eleven studies met our inclusion criteria. Meta-ethnography was applied for the interpretive synthesis. Immigrants’ perceived volunteering contributed to improving self-conception, engaging in the community, developing skills and knowledge, and building social networks. Under certain conditions, volunteering could be an arena for developing meaningfulness and belongingness and capacity building in the new community for immigrants. Our study indicates that volunteering may have a health-promoting impact that may contribute to immigrants’ sense of belonging and positive well-being. However, this effect seems complex, and volunteering activities and contexts must be further explored.
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Category

Academic literature review

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Digital / Health Research
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Year

2022

Published in

Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly

ISSN

0899-7640

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository