Basic information on CBIS enrolment process and members’ characteristics of CBIs Sample Clauses

Basic information on CBIS enrolment process and members’ characteristics of CBIs. Figure 1 describes the procedures that the surveyed initiatives use in order to accept their members. We asked the initiatives: “Do you accept anyone who wants to join your initiative or do you have specific criteria or procedure for new members/people to join?”. Possible options were: 1. Formal enrolment (simple subscription – no fees, just sign up) 2. Membership fee 3. Informal / no rules (anyone who wants to join is welcome) 4. Members’ eligibility based on criteria 5. Interview / any type of screening and selection process 6. Other (please specify) The majority of the respondents (41%) ask for a membership fee to enrol in their initiative. In 21.7% of the cases members are accepted only if they are aligned with a set of eligibility criteria, while in 19.6% of the cases the participation is open to everybody, without any formal enrolment. Similarly, no restriction is foreseen by 8.7% of the initiatives, which, however, have a formal but free enrolment. Considering the initiatives that apply a formal enrolment procedure, the official members are 35,428 (34 initiatives answered to this question). The average value for each initiative is equal to 1,042 members, but the number of members varies considerably from one initiative to another so that the median value is equal to 37. We also asked about the number of official members five years before the interview in order to be able to monitor the eventual growth of the initiatives. For the 26 initiatives, which answered this question, 6 initiatives noted a reduction of their members in the last five years, while for 14 cases the number of members has been increasing. Only in one case it remained stable. The overall number of participants of all initiatives, so not only the formal members, can be summed up to 46,833 persons (based on 39 initiatives). Also in this case the diversity among initiatives in terms of participants is very high as can be seen in the graph below (Figure 2), which shows that the majority of the initiatives involve a number of participants between 10 and 50. Considering now CBIs, “users/utilizers” defined as persons that received some economically valuable benefit from this initiative, (i.e. goods, services), and looking at their sex, the initiatives show a slighter higher number of male than female in absolute value; more precisely the 35 initiatives that provided this data account for respectively 17,801 male and 17,497 female participants. If we analyse the gender distribution within e...
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