Value Proposition
Volunteer policy is the foundation of safe, inclusive, and effective volunteer engagement. A strong policy is a living agreement between the National Society (NS) and its volunteers. By clearly defining mutual roles, expectations, rights, responsibilities, and protections, the NS ensures volunteers are valued and protected, allowing them to serve with greater confidence and commitment.
Purpose & Strategic Importance
Developing and evaluating volunteer policy is vital because it:
- Ensures Alignment: Guarantees consistency with the Fundamental Principles of the Movement, the IFRC Volunteering Policy, and national legal frameworks.
- Provides Protection: Must include safeguarding, insurance, duty of care, data protection, and risk management for all volunteers.
- Builds Trust: Demonstrates that the NS clearly recognizes the rights and protections of its people.
- Creates Sustainability: Establishes the robust foundation necessary for sustainable, well-managed, and growing volunteer engagement.
Scope & Boundaries
This capability covers the entire lifecycle of the volunteer policy: building, evaluating, and improving it over time.
Key Policy Aspects that Must be Defined:
- Clarity: Defining volunteer roles, expectations, rights, and responsibilities.
- Protection: Mandatory inclusion of safeguarding, insurance, duty of care, data protection, and risk management.
- Inclusivity: Active promotion of diversity, equity, and non-discrimination.
- Alignment: Consistency with the IFRC Volunteering Policy, Movement commitments, and national law.
- Adaptability: Mechanism for regular review based on volunteer feedback, new risks, and evolving contexts.
Process & Key Activities (Policy Lifecycle)
This process involves continuous drafting, formalizing, implementing, and evaluating the policy:
- 1. Drafting & Legal Review
- Volunteer Managers lead the drafting and stakeholder consultation.
- Legal Advisors ensure alignment with national law, labor codes, and insurance frameworks.
- 2. Consultation & Governance
- Policies are formally approved by Governance Leaders (Board/Executive).
- Volunteer voices (e.g., youth councils, branch representatives) must be included in discussions to ensure legitimacy.
- 3. Communication & Implementation
- Volunteer Managers oversee implementation planning.
- Branch Coordinators communicate policies and ensure they are applied consistently on the ground.
- 4. Monitoring & Evaluation
- Data (from VDMS, exit interviews, incident reports) is used to track volunteer trends (retention, attrition, training, incidents) and monitor compliance.
- Policy is reviewed regularly (e.g., every 3–5 years) and adapted.
Results
Outputs (Deliverables):
- A formally approved, documented, clear, and legally compliant Volunteer Policy.
- Clear definition of roles and responsibilities for policy execution.
- Documented policy revision cycle and compliance checks.
Outcomes (Short- to Mid-term Effects):
- Increased volunteer safety, well-being, confidence, and commitment.
- Standardized and consistent volunteer management across all branches.
- Adherence to the Fundamental Principle of Voluntary Service.
Impact (Long-term Strategic Change):
- The National Society's credibility is strengthened.
- Legal, financial, and reputational risks are mitigated.
- A sustainable, high-quality foundation for volunteer engagement is secured.
Enablers & Resources
People & Roles:
- Volunteer Manager: Leads the policy lifecycle (drafting, consultation, implementation).
- Legal Advisors: Ensure alignment with national law and insurance.
- Governance Leaders (Board/Executive): Approve policies and oversee compliance.
- Branch Coordinators: Provide local feedback and implement policies.
Governance & Tools:
- Formal Board/Executive Approval processes.
- Regular Oversight and review cycles.
- Volunteer Representation in policy discussions (e.g., councils).
- Data systems (e.g., VDMS) to track trends for evidence-based policy review.
- IFRC resources (e.g., IFRC Volunteering Policy, Legal Issues Related to Volunteering Toolkit).
Facilities & Equipment:
- Policies must set minimum standards for volunteer facilities (safe spaces, accessibility).
- Policies must define standards for equipment provision (PPE, uniforms, ID, insurance documents) to uphold duty of care.
Examples & Innovative Practices
- Spanish Red Cross: Uses a volunteer governance model where local branches shape the policy review process to ensure local relevance.
- Finnish Red Cross: Volunteer councils formally review policies with the National Board, ensuring strong governance and representation.
- Philippine Red Cross: Successfully integrated facilities and equipment standards (e.g., safe spaces post-disaster) into volunteer policies following Typhoon Haiyan, strengthening duty of care.
- Livelihoods and Remuneration: Policies in the Global South are adapted to use a livelihoods and capabilities approach when considering volunteer remuneration, ensuring support enables sustained community activity rather than undermining the voluntary principle.
Common Challenges
- Stagnant Policies: Failure to adhere to a regular revision cycle, making policies outdated or non-compliant.
- Lack of Trust/Buy-in: Developing policies without adequate consultation, leading to them being poorly understood or resisted by volunteers on the ground.
- Legal Misalignment: Drafting policies without thorough legal counsel, resulting in conflicts with national labor or insurance laws.
- Under-Protection: Inadequate policy coverage for critical areas like safeguarding, insurance, and psychological first aid, exposing volunteers and the NS to risk.