In this chapter, we propose a re ection on the relationship between volunteering and political participation. We will ask ourselves whether or not the speci c traits that characterize volunteer engagement in various forms, individual or associative networks, interpersonal links, and the cultures that develop through these activities can in uence political attitudes and different forms of political participation.In recent years, Italian citizens have scarcely harbored positive feelings toward politics but have rather exhibited indifference and often anger toward parties and representative institutions. Their willingness to participate has not diminished, but has rather taken on other forms quite different from the parties themselves (volunteering, associations, movements). These tendencies had already begun manifesting themselves in Italy in the 1980s with the growth of volunteer commitment at a social, individual, or group level. The weight of social volunteering, oriented to the production of public goods, has increased in the last 20 years, while This chapter is based on a paper previously published in Italian in a book edited by Riccardo Guidi, Ksenija Fonovic, and Tania Cappadozzi (Biorcio & Vitale, 2016a). It develops the rst paper deepening the nal discussion on the regression analyses conducted and discussing in-depth how social participation reduces inequalities of political participation by class and age. We would like to thank the editors of the volume, the anonymous referees, as well as Carlo Barone, Bruno Cousin, and Niccolò Morelli for their comments on previous versions of this paper.