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Self-Employment Activities of Women and Minorities : Their Success or Failure in Relation to Social Citizenship Policies /

Contributor(s): Apitzsch, Ursula [editor.] | Kontos, Maria [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Wiesbaden : VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 2008.Description: VI, 218 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783531908168.Subject(s): Social sciences | Sociology | Economic sociology | Social Sciences | Sociology, general | Organizational Studies, Economic SociologyDDC classification: 301 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Methods and contexts -- Social exclusion and self-employment in European societies: An introduction -- The method of biographical policy evaluation -- Socio-economic contexts of self-employment -- Arenas of policy making -- Dimensions of European diversity in non-priviledged self-employment -- The biographical embeddedness of women’s self-employment. Motivations, strategies and policies -- Self-employment, autonomy and empowerment against patriarchal family structures -- Clientelism and family spirit. Some notes on self-employment policy in Calabria -- Gender, the family and self-employment: Is the family a resource for migrant women entrepreneurs? -- Collective self-employment of migrant women in Sweden. Biographical projects and policy measures -- Gendered professional strategies in self-employment -- Migrant men and the challenge of entrepreneurial creativity -- Highly educated and/or skilled migrants from third countries and self-employment in Greece: a comparison between men’s and women’s experiences -- Pontian newcomers in Greece -- Some conclusions.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The discussion on new forms of non-privileged self-employment of women and minorities is usually divided into separate discourses on women’s opportunities on the one hand and ethnic business on the other. The focus in the discussion about the special resources of migrant entrepreneurship has been above all on the assumed collective traditions of ethnic business and not on the individual emancipative resources of the self-employed. This book has brought the two discourses together. While women and migrants are most vulnerable to social exclusion on the labour market, at the same time they are subjects of unrecognized resources for self-employment that have to be taken into account under the special conditions of social citizenship policies in the European Union.
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E books E books PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur
Available EBK4998
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Methods and contexts -- Social exclusion and self-employment in European societies: An introduction -- The method of biographical policy evaluation -- Socio-economic contexts of self-employment -- Arenas of policy making -- Dimensions of European diversity in non-priviledged self-employment -- The biographical embeddedness of women’s self-employment. Motivations, strategies and policies -- Self-employment, autonomy and empowerment against patriarchal family structures -- Clientelism and family spirit. Some notes on self-employment policy in Calabria -- Gender, the family and self-employment: Is the family a resource for migrant women entrepreneurs? -- Collective self-employment of migrant women in Sweden. Biographical projects and policy measures -- Gendered professional strategies in self-employment -- Migrant men and the challenge of entrepreneurial creativity -- Highly educated and/or skilled migrants from third countries and self-employment in Greece: a comparison between men’s and women’s experiences -- Pontian newcomers in Greece -- Some conclusions.

The discussion on new forms of non-privileged self-employment of women and minorities is usually divided into separate discourses on women’s opportunities on the one hand and ethnic business on the other. The focus in the discussion about the special resources of migrant entrepreneurship has been above all on the assumed collective traditions of ethnic business and not on the individual emancipative resources of the self-employed. This book has brought the two discourses together. While women and migrants are most vulnerable to social exclusion on the labour market, at the same time they are subjects of unrecognized resources for self-employment that have to be taken into account under the special conditions of social citizenship policies in the European Union.

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