Publications
Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, 33/1, Mar 2004, pp. 94-108.
A study was conducted among 40 volunteers in Israel's National Service, a voluntary alternative to serving in the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), to examine their characteristics, their opinions and their motivations for service, and their levels of satisfaction or dissatisfaction with their work. The findings indicated that parents and friends have the greatest influence on volunteers' decision to serve in the National Service rather than in the IDF; that altruism is the major motivating factor for serving, followed by environmental pressure and idealism; that respondents were mostly satisfied with their experiences, particularly in relation to the attitudes of their coworkers; and that there was some dissatisfaction in relation to the lack of public appreciation of their duties.
Keywords: IDF; National Service
The opinions expressed in INSS publications are the authors’ alone.