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Families of rural volunteer firefighters

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Families of rural volunteer firefighters. / Cowlishaw, Sean; Evans, Lynette; Mclennan, Jim.
In: Rural Society, Vol. 18, No. 1, 04.2008, p. 17-25.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Cowlishaw, S, Evans, L & Mclennan, J 2008, 'Families of rural volunteer firefighters', Rural Society, vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 17-25. https://doi.org/10.5172/rsj.351.18.1.17

APA

Cowlishaw, S., Evans, L., & Mclennan, J. (2008). Families of rural volunteer firefighters. Rural Society, 18(1), 17-25. https://doi.org/10.5172/rsj.351.18.1.17

Vancouver

Cowlishaw S, Evans L, Mclennan J. Families of rural volunteer firefighters. Rural Society. 2008 Apr;18(1):17-25. doi: 10.5172/rsj.351.18.1.17

Author

Cowlishaw, Sean ; Evans, Lynette ; Mclennan, Jim. / Families of rural volunteer firefighters. In: Rural Society. 2008 ; Vol. 18, No. 1. pp. 17-25.

Bibtex

@article{e3bacec5f50d46ebaa4d8f259b6bfea8,
title = "Families of rural volunteer firefighters",
abstract = "The protection of Australian rural communities from fire and other emergencies is provided mostly by volunteers. However, many fire agencies are facing concerns over falling volunteer numbers and are increasingly looking at factors potentially impacting on volunteering. Evidence suggests that family issues play a role in many volunteer resignations and could be contributing to declining volunteer numbers. Despite this, there is little research available on the families of rural volunteer firefighters and agencies have little evidence to inform strategies for supporting the families of their volunteers. In a preliminary effort to address this lack of knowledge, this review summarises the small amount of research available on rural families in general, and then volunteer firefighter families in particular. It then introduces a potentially useful model of Work-Family Conflict, which suggests that time- and strain-based pressures may be important sources of difficulty for spouses and partners balancing volunteer firefighter and family roles. This review concludes by summarising directions for future research that are important, if volunteer-based rural fire agencies are to develop policies to better support the families of their volunteers.",
keywords = "family, rural, volunteers, firefighting , emergency services , work-family conflict (WFC) ",
author = "Sean Cowlishaw and Lynette Evans and Jim Mclennan",
year = "2008",
month = apr,
doi = "10.5172/rsj.351.18.1.17",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "17--25",
journal = "Rural Society",
issn = "1037-1656",
publisher = "eContent Management Pty Ltd",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Families of rural volunteer firefighters

AU - Cowlishaw, Sean

AU - Evans, Lynette

AU - Mclennan, Jim

PY - 2008/4

Y1 - 2008/4

N2 - The protection of Australian rural communities from fire and other emergencies is provided mostly by volunteers. However, many fire agencies are facing concerns over falling volunteer numbers and are increasingly looking at factors potentially impacting on volunteering. Evidence suggests that family issues play a role in many volunteer resignations and could be contributing to declining volunteer numbers. Despite this, there is little research available on the families of rural volunteer firefighters and agencies have little evidence to inform strategies for supporting the families of their volunteers. In a preliminary effort to address this lack of knowledge, this review summarises the small amount of research available on rural families in general, and then volunteer firefighter families in particular. It then introduces a potentially useful model of Work-Family Conflict, which suggests that time- and strain-based pressures may be important sources of difficulty for spouses and partners balancing volunteer firefighter and family roles. This review concludes by summarising directions for future research that are important, if volunteer-based rural fire agencies are to develop policies to better support the families of their volunteers.

AB - The protection of Australian rural communities from fire and other emergencies is provided mostly by volunteers. However, many fire agencies are facing concerns over falling volunteer numbers and are increasingly looking at factors potentially impacting on volunteering. Evidence suggests that family issues play a role in many volunteer resignations and could be contributing to declining volunteer numbers. Despite this, there is little research available on the families of rural volunteer firefighters and agencies have little evidence to inform strategies for supporting the families of their volunteers. In a preliminary effort to address this lack of knowledge, this review summarises the small amount of research available on rural families in general, and then volunteer firefighter families in particular. It then introduces a potentially useful model of Work-Family Conflict, which suggests that time- and strain-based pressures may be important sources of difficulty for spouses and partners balancing volunteer firefighter and family roles. This review concludes by summarising directions for future research that are important, if volunteer-based rural fire agencies are to develop policies to better support the families of their volunteers.

KW - family

KW - rural

KW - volunteers

KW - firefighting

KW - emergency services

KW - work-family conflict (WFC)

U2 - 10.5172/rsj.351.18.1.17

DO - 10.5172/rsj.351.18.1.17

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

SP - 17

EP - 25

JO - Rural Society

JF - Rural Society

SN - 1037-1656

IS - 1

ER -