The 13 partners in the EU-funded V4V project “Skills acquired through volunteering in sport” gathered for their fifth Full Partner Meeting in the City of London as guests of the UK’s Sport and Recreation Alliance.
Coordinated by EOSE, this two-day event gave the partners a full opportunity to review and approve the final draft of the project’s key research report A Comprehensive Mapping of the sport volunteering workforce in Europe, to continue their detailed work on two practical online toolkits and to plan how the project’s outputs can go forward after its conclusion in December 2023.
>> Comprehensive Mapping of the Sport Volunteering Workforce in Europe
Led by EOSE and the Hungarian University of Sports Science (HUSS), this report is probably the first and certainly the most up-to-date study of sport volunteering across Europe. Combining literature reviews of the countries and sports represented in V4V, interviews with 57 sport volunteers and a massive survey of 2 723 sport organisations, the report strongly confirms what we have suspected for some time – sport in Europe, especially at the grassroots, simply could not exist without the support of the estimated 12m citizens who freely give their time and energy to the sector.
When professionally designed for publication in June 2023, the Comprehensive Mapping will make fascinating reading for anyone who wants to know more about the size of the volunteer workforce, its demographic profile, existing volunteer roles, national and cultural differences, inclusion and diversity, the impact of COVID on volunteering, incentives and barriers to sport volunteering and the many challenges in terms of recruitment, retention, management and training, and a series of conclusions which point to potential solutions.
>> Practical and innovative support for sport organisations and volunteers
V4V is not just a research project. The partners are currently using the key findings from the Comprehensive Mapping to build two practical online tools for sport volunteering:
The meeting in London consolidated all the hard work which the partners have been putting into developing the structure and content of these innovative tools, and partners were delighted to view a live demonstration of the sport organisation online toolkit and discuss further improvements.
>> Sustaining the project outputs into the future
With the project reaching its conclusion in December 2023, the meeting also considered how V4V’s innovative outputs can be sustained and used after the funding period ends. Led by the Portuguese Institute of Sport and Youth (IPDJ) and the International Sport and Culture Association (ISCA), the meeting began to work out the structure, potential recommendations, targeted audiences and key priority actions of a plan to ensure the ongoing dissemination and maintenance of the products and practical activities to embed them into the work of international, European and national sport federations and their huge networks of clubs.
>> Networking and cultural exchanges
Full partner meetings also offer informal opportunities for colleagues from so many countries to find more about the cities they are visiting and strengthen their transnational relationships, mutual interests and professional networks. This was more than satisfied by a dinner and evening walking tour, led by Martin Lindsey of the Sport and Recreation Alliance, which contrasted the gleaming skyscrapers of London’s financial district with historic sites such as the Tower of London, Tower Bridge, the River Thames and its famous South Bank.
>> Reflections
Reflecting on the two-day event, Aurélien Favre, EOSE Executive Director said, “We are convinced that the Comprehensive Mapping Study will make an important contribution to the body of knowledge around sport volunteering and will be of great value to sport stakeholders at every level and in every country. Work on the practical toolkits is progressing really well. By December, we will have a suite of products which this partnership will feel genuinely proud of and will want the world of sport volunteering to know about. What is perhaps most impressive about this project is the tireless dedication of the partners, their great teamwork, energy, creativity and determination. In so many ways, they exemplify the spirit of the sport volunteers they are working to support.”
Martin Lindsey, Chief Operating Officer at the Sport and Recreation Alliance said, “It was a pleasure to welcome the V4V partners to the UK and host them in London for the latest full partner meeting. The developments that have been made are fantastic and are in no doubt a reflection of the great collaboration within the partnership. The report for the Comprehensive Mapping of the Sport Volunteering Workforce in Europe is nearing completion, the development of the tools to support volunteering and volunteers are really starting to take shape, and early discussions on the sustainability plan will ensure that there is value from the V4V project for years to come.”
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