Sanghera Balihar
School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK.
Soc Sci Inf (Paris). 2017 Mar;56(1):28-48. doi: 10.1177/0539018416646486. Epub 2016 Jul 8.
This article examines how individuals are reflexive beings who interpret the world in relation to things that matter to them, and how charitable acts are evaluated and embedded in their lives with different degrees of meaning and importance. Rather than framing the discussion of charitable practices in terms of an altruism/egoism binary or imputing motivations and values to social structures, the article explains how reflexivity is an important and neglected dimension of social practices, and how it interacts with sympathy, sentiments and discourses to shape giving. The study also shows that there are different modes of reflexivity, which have varied effects on charity and volunteering.