Deri Armstrong, CatherineDevlin, Rose AnneSeifi, Forough2020-04-062020-04-062018http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40326https://doi.org/10.20381/ruor-24559Volunteers are reputedly healthier and happier than their non-volunteering counterparts. But is this a causal link or are healthier, happy individuals simply more likely to volunteer? Some papers have attempted to identify the causal relationship using an instrumental variable methodology; most relying on measures of religiosity as instruments for volunteering. No studies of such nature have been conducted in Canada. We rely on a novel instrument, a measure physical proximity to volunteer opportunities and use data from Canadian General Social Surveys to fill this gap. Employing a conditional mixed process (CMP) model, we find that volunteering is a robustly significant predictor of health, and positively affects life satisfaction for female and middle-aged individuals.envolunteeringvolunteering and healthvolunteering and life satisfactionDoing Good, Feeling Good: Causal Evidence from Canadian VolunteersWorking Paper