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Youth enterprise: the role of gender and life stage in motivations, aspirations and measures of success

Youth enterprise: the role of gender and life stage in motivations, aspirations and measures of success
Youth enterprise: the role of gender and life stage in motivations, aspirations and measures of success
‘Enterprise’ has increasingly become part of the United Kingdom’s political grammar and efforts to develop entrepreneurial traits and activities in young people have been a key strand of this policy focus. As the 2008 economic recession saw a curtailed youth labour market, enterprise emerged as an appealing policy ‘solution’ to youth unemployment. Traditional measures of enterprise chart the numbers of new businesses and their survival rates. This article argues these measures tell us little about new business owners: who they are, their motivations, experiences or, own definitions of success. Further, and crucially, such measures ignore the structural constraints surrounding enterprise and the range of social factors that may determine the extent of ambition, and willingness or capacity to take risks. This article argues that although gender and life stage were contributing factors, the young people’s structurally disadvantaged positions emerge as the most significant feature of why the move into self-employment did not tend to increase their economic stability as promised. This provides an important insight into the real-life experiences of young people who are engaging in enterprise activities in the contemporary economic context, as well as the role of third sector organisations in overseeing the transition from education to work.
1363-9080
144-158
Wilde, Rachel J.
3c845b9f-629b-439f-a899-fad780dbbc5f
Leonard, Pauline
a2839090-eccc-4d84-ab63-c6a484c6d7c1
Wilde, Rachel J.
3c845b9f-629b-439f-a899-fad780dbbc5f
Leonard, Pauline
a2839090-eccc-4d84-ab63-c6a484c6d7c1

Wilde, Rachel J. and Leonard, Pauline (2018) Youth enterprise: the role of gender and life stage in motivations, aspirations and measures of success. Journal of Education and Work, 31 (2), 144-158. (doi:10.1080/13639080.2017.1421311).

Record type: Article

Abstract

‘Enterprise’ has increasingly become part of the United Kingdom’s political grammar and efforts to develop entrepreneurial traits and activities in young people have been a key strand of this policy focus. As the 2008 economic recession saw a curtailed youth labour market, enterprise emerged as an appealing policy ‘solution’ to youth unemployment. Traditional measures of enterprise chart the numbers of new businesses and their survival rates. This article argues these measures tell us little about new business owners: who they are, their motivations, experiences or, own definitions of success. Further, and crucially, such measures ignore the structural constraints surrounding enterprise and the range of social factors that may determine the extent of ambition, and willingness or capacity to take risks. This article argues that although gender and life stage were contributing factors, the young people’s structurally disadvantaged positions emerge as the most significant feature of why the move into self-employment did not tend to increase their economic stability as promised. This provides an important insight into the real-life experiences of young people who are engaging in enterprise activities in the contemporary economic context, as well as the role of third sector organisations in overseeing the transition from education to work.

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Accepted/In Press date: 20 December 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 January 2018
Published date: 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 416846
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/416846
ISSN: 1363-9080
PURE UUID: bd73089d-9ae3-4340-ae5c-2a865811bcb3
ORCID for Pauline Leonard: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8112-0631

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Jan 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 06:05

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Contributors

Author: Rachel J. Wilde
Author: Pauline Leonard ORCID iD

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