21 results on '"Informal economy"'
Search Results
2. Subversive Self-Employment: Intersectionality and Self-Employment Among Dependent Visas Holders in the United States.
- Author
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Banerjee, Pallavi
- Subjects
- *
SELF-employment - Abstract
Drawing on intersectionality theory, I examine how U.S. visa policies shape the informal self-employment experiences of Indian women and men who migrated to the United States on "dependent visas" to accompany their highly skilled spouses on temporary work visas. Dependent visa policy prohibits employment for the visa holders for a period that can last from 6 to 20 years. Despite this, only a handful of those on dependent visas pursued informal self-employment in my sample, with fewer men than women. This study is based on interviews with 45 participants, with a special focus on 18 dependent spouses (men and women), who had engaged in active self-employment, and tries to understand their experiences with self-employment, particularly their choice of businesses and the role of self-employment in their lives as dependents. I conclude that the complexities of the experiences of self-employment for my research participants are embedded in the intersections of their gender, class, race, and immigration status. Additionally, self-employment itself inadvertently becomes an act of subversion against their state-imposed dependence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The work of shopping: Resellers and the informal economy at the goodwill bins.
- Author
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Ayres, Jennifer
- Subjects
THRIFT shops ,INFORMAL sector ,SHOPPING ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,PRODUCTION (Economic theory) ,CAPITALISM - Abstract
In this article, I examine the material and everyday practices of a community of thrift-shoppers at the Goodwill Bins. Their practices reveal that shopping in these cutthroat environments is anything but leisurely. By attending to how these spaces are utilised as resources for independent ventures in the informal economy, I show how the occupation of reselling blurs the lines between consumption and production, and shopping and work. I argue that the thrift store can be viewed as a microcosm of the broader shifts occurring in the economy and the latest capitalist reorganisation of work into non-standard and precarious forms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Corporate Disruption: The Law and Design of Organizations in the Twenty-First Century.
- Author
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Callison, William, Fenwick, Mark, McCahery, Joseph A., and Vermeulen, Erik P. M.
- Subjects
- *
CORPORATION law , *SMALL business , *AMERICAN business enterprises , *ENTREPRENEURSHIP , *CORPORATE legal departments - Abstract
This paper explores the issue of 're-making' corporate law through the prism of the United Nations' recent efforts at reducing legal obstacles experienced by micro-, small- and medium-sized enterprises in starting and scaling a business. In order to be fully successful, this paper suggests that the UN should go back to business fundamentals and should attempt to build from the ground up based on the real world needs of entrepreneurs, rather than work off already existing corporate legal systems. In this way, it is possible to engage in a more imaginative form of regulatory design in which a clear, open and preferential legal framework for stimulating innovation and business creation can be developed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Ramen Politics: Informal Money and Logics of Resistance in the Contemporary American Prison.
- Author
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Gibson-Light, Michael
- Subjects
- *
PRISON administration , *PRISON security measures , *PRISONER attitudes , *AUTONOMY (Philosophy) , *CORRECTIONS (Criminal justice administration) , *PRISONS - Abstract
This article explores an unexpected yet pervasive arena in which changes to security may alter lived experiences of and responses to punishment. Namely, amidst changes in the quality of care behind U.S. prison walls and resultant prisoner insecurities in the face of neoliberal penology, the nation’s prisoners have adapted informal prison markets to address unmet needs and pursue autonomy. Where cigarettes once reigned as the de facto token of exchange in the underground economy, the contemporary American prison is now home to a new form of informal money: cheap, reliable food items like ramen noodles. Drawing on 18 months of ethnographic fieldwork within a U.S. men’s state prison and 82 in-depth interviews with prisoners and institutional staff, this paper explores this change in the form of informal prison money and what it reveals about the nation’s prisons and prisoners. It contends that prison money reflects changing logics of prisoner resistance in particular political-economic and penal contexts. As prison administrative practices, institutional conditions, and legal environments change with time, prisoners adapt expressions of autonomy accordingly. While cigarettes symbolized withdrawal from the rigors of prison life and individualized treatment—the dominant logic of resistance of the prior era—the new ramen currency reflects a growing emphasis on prison “foodways” in opposition to cost-shifting and deteriorating services behind bars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Strategic Visibility and the Production of Day-Labor Spaces: A Case Study from the San Diego Metropolitan Area.
- Author
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Crotty, Sean M.
- Subjects
- *
DAY laborers , *INFORMAL sector , *METROPOLITAN areas , *PUBLIC spaces , *URBAN sociology - Abstract
In cities across the United States, groups of mostly men congregate in public and semipublic spaces in hopes of being hired for short-term work. The particular spaces where laborers congregate each day are crucial to their economic and social fortunes, yet to date, there is limited research examining the spatial organization of these sites. In this article, I draw on relational perspectives on the production of space and governmentality practices to examine day-labor hiring spaces in the San Diego Metropolitan Area. Drawing on more than seven years of mixed-methods research, I argue that laborers collectively employ strategic visibility: a set of spatial practices that reduces the potential for conflict and ensures laborers’ continued access to the particular spaces on which their survival depends. This analysis suggests that laborers’ site-selection and spatial practices are driven by pragmatic, economic concerns, rather than fear of interactions with policing agencies and/or anti-immigrant residents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
7. The Work: Dealing and Violence in the War on Drugs Era.
- Author
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Cooley, Will
- Subjects
DRUG traffic ,DRUG control ,VIOLENCE ,CAPITALISM ,DRUG dealers - Abstract
This essay demonstrates that drug prohibition has been a prime driver of violence as workers in the informal economy engaged in rational market regulation. Most studies of the carceral state have been top-down assessments that have not considered the ripple effects of the lucrative, frenzied drug trade. Through an examination of the experiences of dealers, the essay shows how their search for rewarding work interacted with the contextual issues of poverty, racial segregation, deindustrialization, and government policy to account for a substantial amount of mayhem in the war on drugs era. The fervent enforcement of prohibition increased violence and incarceration as offenders acted in sensible ways to secure their livelihoods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Structural change, expanding informality and labour productivity growth in Russia.
- Author
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Voskoboynikov, Ilya B.
- Subjects
LABOR productivity ,EMPLOYMENT ,RUSSIAN economy ,RETAIL industry ,CAPITALISM ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
Intensive growth, structural change and expanding informality has characterized many developing and emerging economies in recent decades. Yet most empirical investigations into the relationship between structural change and productivity growth overlook informality. This paper includes the informal sector in an analysis of the effects of structural changes in the Russian economy on aggregate labour productivity growth. Using a newly developed dataset for 34 industries covering the period 1995-2012 and applying three alternative approaches, aggregate labour productivity growth is decomposed into intra-industry and inter-industry contributions. All three approaches show that the overall contribution of structural change is growth-enhancing, significant and attenuating over time. Labour reallocation from the formal sector to the informal sector tends to reduce growth through the extension of informal activities with low productivity levels. Sectoral labour reallocation effects are found to be highly sensitive to the methods applied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
9. A floor to exploitation? Social economy organizations at the edge of a restructuring economy.
- Author
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Visser, M. Anne
- Subjects
INFORMAL sector ,LABOR market ,EMPLOYMENT ,NONPROFIT sector ,NONPROFIT organizations - Abstract
Despite research documenting social economy organizations (SEOs) as important labour market intermediaries in the informal economy, the impact of these organizations on employment outcomes experienced by workers engaged in these labour markets is relatively unknown. This article analyses the impact of day labour worker centres on employment outcomes experienced in the informal day labour economy of the United States. Using data from the National Day Labour Survey, findings indicate that these organizations improve working conditions for day labourers and suggest the potential for SEOs to regulate employment processes within the informal economy. However increasing the regulatory capacity of SEOs will require addressing larger political and socioeconomic contexts in which the informal economy is embedded. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. 'Is It Entrepreneurship, or Is It Survival?': Gender, Community, and Innovation in Boston's Black Immigrant Micro-Enterprise Spaces.
- Author
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Addo, Ping-Ann
- Subjects
WOMEN immigrants ,SMALL business ,SOCIAL justice - Abstract
Micro-enterprises are typically classified as businesses with fewer than six employees and very small amounts of financial capital. Focusing on black immigrant women's micro-entrepreneurial ventures in Boston, this paper explores how non-economic forms of capital are crucial to the survival of micro-enterprise, in large part because of customer choices to patronize businesses they trust and to support proprietors whose identities and values they share. The richness of social and cultural capital and local information--controlled by minority immigrant women micro-entrepreneurs--can easily go undetected by mainstream lenders, training programs, and policy-makers. Other features that go unnoticed include the fact that the proprietors and patrons of micro-enterprises can often be highly skilled and educated and that innovative business moves are often embodied in already-existing processes of reciprocity and exchange. With implications for how funding can be infused into communities deeply connected to informal economy processes in U.S. cities, the paper argues for support for community-based processes of local development, economic growth, and social justice that are rooted in the communities that need them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. New Business Models Demand New Forms of Worker Organizing.
- Author
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Ai-jen Poo and Palak Shah
- Subjects
- *
LABOR organizing , *LABOR unions , *CAPITALISM , *FORCED labor , *EMPLOYMENT practices , *INFORMAL sector - Abstract
The article focuses on the Good Work Code (GWC) and forms of worker organizing in the U.S. It discusses Jay Youngdahl's three objections to the GWC such as the values framework articulated is aspirational and unenforceable, companies engaging in bad labor practices, and belief to mobilize good capitalism to solve problem of worker exploitation. Other topics include the function of the National Domestic Workers Alliance (NDWA), labor movement, and vision of GWC.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Day labor, informality and vulnerability in South Africa and the United States.
- Author
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Theodore, Nik, Blaauw, Derick, Schenck, Catherina, Valenzuela Jr., Abel, Schoeman, Christie, and Meléndez, Edwin
- Subjects
- *
DAY laborers , *TEMPORARY employees , *PRECARITY , *CONTINGENT employment , *LABOR mobility , *INFORMAL sector , *LABOR market - Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to compare conditions in informal day-labor markets in South Africa and the USA to better understand the nature of worker vulnerabilities in this market, as well as the economic conditions that have contributed to the growth of day labor. The conclusion considers interventions that are underway in the two countries to improve conditions in day-labor markets. Design/methodology/approach – The paper is based on national surveys of day laborers in South Africa and the USA. A random sample of day laborers seeking work at informal hiring sites was undertaken in each country. The paper presents key findings, compares conditions in South Africa and the USA, and analyzes the relationship between economic change, labor-market dynamics, and worker vulnerability. Findings – Day-labor work is characterized by low pay, hazardous conditions on the job, and tremendous income insecurity. The day-labor markets in South Africa and the USA perform somewhat different functions within regional economies. Within South Africa, day labor can be regarded as a survival strategy. The growth of day labor in South Africa over the past decade is a manifestation of a formal labor market that is incapable of absorbing the structurally unemployed. Here, day labor is the employment of last resort, allowing workers to subsist on the fringes of the mainstream economy, but offering few pathways into the formal sector. In the USA, the day labor workforce is a largely undocumented-immigrant workforce. Workers seek work at informal hiring sites, maintaining a tenuous hold on jobs in the construction industry. There is evidence of some mobility into more stable and better paying employment. Practical implications – This paper documents the need for policies and programs to increase employment opportunities for day laborers and to better enforce labor standards in the informal economy. Originality/value – This paper summarizes findings from the only two national surveys of day laborers that have been conducted, and it compares for the first time the dynamic within growing day-labor markets in a developed- and emerging-market context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Fining McWalmart.
- Author
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Smiley, Erica
- Subjects
- *
MINIMUM wage laws , *EMPLOYEES , *WORKING class , *PROFIT , *PUBLIC demonstrations - Abstract
The article reports on several low-wage workers and allies protesting across the U.S., demanding a raise to the federal minimum wage. It is said that minimum wage increases may not build the sustained power that comes from strong worker organizations and the government's focus should be on strategies that build it.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. From the enclave to the city: the economic benefits of immigrant flexibility.
- Author
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Kim, Anna Joo
- Subjects
- *
FOREIGN workers , *IMMIGRANTS , *WAGES , *SOCIAL security ,UNITED States economy - Abstract
While much attention has been paid to the entrepreneurial “base” of the ethnic economy, the enclave is primarily composed of thousands of hourly employees working in small co-ethnic or multi-ethnic immigrant firms. The US economy benefits from over 10 billion dollars in taxed income and wages from immigrants whose social security numbers do not match up with their employee tax identification numbers. Multiple mismatches and misinformation about immigrants (from an economic, cultural, and political standpoint) demonstrate the need to understand the unique potential of immigrant communities in facilitating urban growth. Koreatown in Los Angeles, an ethnic enclave economy that is also a central business district for many immigrant workers, is one emergent example of new types of flexibility around citizenship status and semi-formal jobs as they are negotiated on a daily basis in the neighbourhood. Previous studies of the ethnic enclave have maintained that there is a singular importance to the co-ethnic network (Korean to Korean, or Cuban to Cuban, for example), and yet this traditional characterisation of the ethnic enclave does not hold true in most urban ethnic enclaves, which include multiple ethnic groups working side by side. Interviews with Korean and Latino workers demonstrate the ways in which people (including undocumented individuals) contribute to the local economy, and informally communicate in neighbourhoods and cities to build a broader social and economic network outside of enclave boundaries. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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15. Comprehensive Immigration Reform and U.S. Labor Markets: Dilemmas for Progressive Labor.
- Author
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Stoll, David
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRATION reform , *FOREIGN workers , *IMMIGRATION law , *LABOR market , *CONSTRUCTION industry personnel , *LABOR laws - Abstract
The article discusses the impact of the Comprehensive Immigration Reform (CIR) on the U.S. labor markets. Topics include the employment of immigrants, the research on informalization which examines the impact of high immigration on construction industry workers in Texas, and the immigrant ethnic economy in Los Angeles, California and New York.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Legitimating Informal Economy: The Role of Intermediary in the Case of Latino Day Laborers.
- Author
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Yamamoto, Satomi
- Subjects
EMIGRATION & immigration ,NONPROFIT organizations ,UNSKILLED labor ,UNDOCUMENTED immigrants ,EMPLOYEES - Abstract
Migration researchers know that many types of intermediary are involved in the process of migration and settlement from formal to informal ones. Many studies, however, overlook what kinds of role an intermediary undertakes, aside from a utilitarian point of view. Through a case study of Latino day laborers and nonprofit organizations, the paper argues that the role of intermediary is to reinforce the legitimacy of casual employment of undocumented workers in the U.S. They use the Workers' Center as a space to mold undocumented workers to socially desirable subjects. First, they foster a state of 'governmentality from below' (Feurguson and Gupta 2002) among day laborers by using the notion of democracy as a source of power. Then, they proclaim the workers' civic citizenship by presenting them to the people in adjacent neighboring communities as a harmless and hard-working group of people who are just waiting for work outside. They also advertise the availability of day laborers in newspapers and at media conferences. Through these activities, what an intermediary actually does is that they erase the shadowy image of hiring undocumented workers, and imbues the public with a new perspective that we are supporting their alternative economic adjustment to the American economy. ..PAT.-Unpublished Manuscript [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
17. Changing household dynamics: Children’s American generational resources in street vending markets.
- Author
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Estrada, Emir
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *DECISION making , *HISPANIC Americans , *PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants , *INTERVIEWING , *LANGUAGE & languages , *RESEARCH methodology , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *PARENT-child relationships , *SOUND recordings , *WORK - Abstract
This article prompts a re-visioning of segmented assimilation theory by examining the household dynamics and consequences that occur when Latino immigrant children and youth become active contributors to family street vending businesses. Based on participant observation and 20 in-depth interviews with Latino children who work with their immigrant parents as street vendors in Los Angeles, the article demonstrates how adolescent street vendors contribute to household decisions. It is argued that children in street vending families share power in the household because of: (1) their contributions to their family’s income; (2) their involvement in business negotiations and decision-making processes; and (3) their ‘American generational resources,’ which include English language skills, citizenship, and technological and popular culture knowledge, all valued by their parents and useful for the family street vending business. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Screening item effects in estimating the prevalence of nascent entrepreneurs.
- Author
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Reynolds, Paul Davidson
- Subjects
BUSINESSPEOPLE ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,NEW business enterprises ,INFORMAL sector ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The use of human population surveys to estimate the prevalence of nascent entrepreneurs has become a major feature of both longitudinal studies of the firm creation process, such as the US Panel Studies of Entrepreneurial Dynamics (PSED) research program, as well as cross-national comparisons, as reflected in the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) initiative. The basic procedure has been to use interview screening items to locate individuals that may be considered candidate nascent entrepreneurs; other criteria are then used to identify those considered active nascent entrepreneurs. In these human population surveys, little attention has been paid to the potential impact of variations in wording in the initial screening items, either across time in the same language or in different languages, on the final prevalence rates. Analysis of 134 independent samples in the US over the 1993–2006 period, where different screening items were employed, indicates a major impact of item wording. Once adjustments to account for item variation were made, there was no statistically significant change in the prevalence of active nascent entrepreneurs, from 5 to 6 per 100 over the 1998–2006 period. This pattern of temporal stability is consistent with three other national programs measuring U.S. new firm creation activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. DERECHOS HUMANOS, MIGRANTES Y TRANSNACIONALISMO El caso de ACAT en Francia.
- Author
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González, Olga L.
- Subjects
- *
HUMAN rights , *ETHNOLOGY , *ARCHITECT Registration Examination , *POLITICAL action committees - Abstract
Are international migrants transnational protest agents? Do they involve themselves in the northern NGOs devoted to defending human rights? On what roads does transnational human rights activism travel? On the crossroads on two fields of study privileged by a transnational approach, protest and migrations, and based on a case study, this article offers answers to these questions. The work is supported by well-formed knowledge of Latin American migration in France, and the examination of the experience of a human rights defense association, deeply involved in Latin America. The mechanisms of transnational action are specified and analyzed, and an explanation for the Colombian case is proposed: the permanence of the practice of Rebusquc (tirelessly seeking any kind of livelihood). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Progressive Ethnocentrism: Ideology and Understanding in Dominican Baseball.
- Author
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Klein, Alan
- Subjects
- *
ETHNOCENTRISM , *NATIONALISM , *CULTURAL relativism , *BASEBALL , *SOCIAL attitudes - Abstract
This study is an effort to examine the problems associated with interpreting events and practices emanating in one cultural context (the Dominican Republic) by those of another (the United States)—part of the classic definition of ethnocentrism. Ethnocentrism has been considered to be a problem linked to close-minded individuals and agencies, but this study attempts to show that progressive thinkers can also fall prey to it. Two case studies are looked at-the case of buscónes (those responsible for finding and developing Dominican ballplayers) and the case of former Little League sensation Danny Almonte (himself a Dominican émigré). The cases involve young men who have been wronged in one way or another. Guilt and innocence has been reported in the United States. However, ethnographic research into these cases shows that one can be right on the particulars while wrong in matters of cultural context and therefore unintentionally furthering ethnocentric bias. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Regular Work, Underground Jobs, and Hustling: An Examination of Paternal Work and Father Involvement.
- Author
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Woldoff, Rachel A. and Cina, Michael G.
- Subjects
- *
FATHERS , *INFORMAL sector , *SINGLE fathers , *FATHER-child relationship , *AFRICAN American fathers , *LATIN Americans , *WHITE people , *EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
This paper analyzes data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study to examine a sample of urban fathers, a majority of whom were unwed at the time of their child's birth. Integrating research on race/ethnicity, poverty, family, work, and crime, this study explores how fathers' participation in regular work, underground employment, and illicit hustles is related to engagement with their children; it also investigates how these relationships vary by race. The results show that the more time fathers spend in illegal hustling, the less engaged they are with their children. In contrast, time spent working in the formal economy has a positive effect on father engagement. Importantly, the effects of work on father engagement vary by race/ethnicity. The positive relationship between fathers' participation in regular work and engagement with children is even greater for African Americans than whites. In addition, underground work has a more positive association with father engagement for African American fathers than white fathers. Finally, hustling has a more negative effect on engagement among African American fathers than among Latino fathers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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