Affiliations for homeless individuals through social enterprise employment

Purpose This paper aims to explore the ways in which a social enterprise provides opportunities to its homeless employees to increase their number and types of affiliations. Design/methodology/approach Affiliation theory is used to explore whether employment at a social enterprise may ameliorate hom...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social enterprise journal 2019-05, Vol.15 (2), p.215-232
Hauptverfasser: Cook, Molly, Willetts, Marion C
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container_title Social enterprise journal
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creator Cook, Molly
Willetts, Marion C
description Purpose This paper aims to explore the ways in which a social enterprise provides opportunities to its homeless employees to increase their number and types of affiliations. Design/methodology/approach Affiliation theory is used to explore whether employment at a social enterprise may ameliorate homelessness by increasing the affiliations employees acquire. Seven semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with participants at one social enterprise. Findings Results indicate that enterprise leadership staff facilitate opportunities to employees to increase and maintain their affiliations. Leadership staff provide a supportive environment, allowing employees to gain social skills and feelings of utility that result in their building and maintaining affiliations. However, leadership staff confront high turn-over, addiction and mental illness among employees, which result in disaffiliation. Employees contend with a lack of housing and limited educational and job training opportunities; obtaining these resources in the future may necessitate additional affiliations. Originality/value This paper contributes to the current state of knowledge concerning affiliation theory and the employment of homeless individuals through a social enterprise by demonstrating the importance of both strong and weak ties between employees and employers, social service agencies, other employees and members of the community outside of work, and how the strength of ties may change over time.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Emerald Journals; Standard: Emerald eJournal Premier Collection
subjects Affordable housing
Case studies
Community
Divorce
Educational programs
Employees
Employers
Employment
Homeless people
Housing
Job training
Leadership
Mental disorders
Nonprofit organizations
Researchers
Self sufficiency
Social agencies
Social entrepreneurship
Social networks
Social services
Subsidies
Theory
title Affiliations for homeless individuals through social enterprise employment
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