Reconceptualizing informal work practices: some observations from an ethnic minority community in urban UK
Reconceptualizing informal work practices: some observations from an ethnic minority community in urban UK
Whilst paid informal work has been conceptualized as a form of paid employment imbued with solely economic motivations, this article critically argues that such a market‐oriented reading fails to take into account alternative explanations for the existence of informal work practices. Using evidence from 50 interviews conducted within a Pakistani urban community in a northern UK city, this article, uses a mixed‐embeddedness perspective to highlight the importance of predominantly socially and culturally driven motives in the decision to engage in informal work. The findings highlight that participation in informal work, whilst a product of marginalization due to certain institutional and structural factors, is also driven by a range of non‐monetary motives—a result of certain socially embedded work relations between ethnic minority workers and their employers. It is this social embeddedness of the employer–employee relationship in the Pakistani ethnic minority community that explains the continuation of informal work practices in the face of prevailing laws and regulations. The findings add weight to the understanding of informal work as being about more than just economics and constraints, offering these ethnic minority workers opportunities, even status, and giving them agency in an otherwise disempowered situation.
476-496
Rodgers, Peter
78e39552-3d65-4b44-b0e1-10043ba3ff5d
Shehryar Shahid, Muhammad
a592a95d-c845-4615-8918-c894f79c892a
Williams, Colin
0b65fcb8-0a1e-4ccd-b882-51f358dc1f0c
May 2019
Rodgers, Peter
78e39552-3d65-4b44-b0e1-10043ba3ff5d
Shehryar Shahid, Muhammad
a592a95d-c845-4615-8918-c894f79c892a
Williams, Colin
0b65fcb8-0a1e-4ccd-b882-51f358dc1f0c
Rodgers, Peter, Shehryar Shahid, Muhammad and Williams, Colin
(2019)
Reconceptualizing informal work practices: some observations from an ethnic minority community in urban UK.
International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 43 (3), .
(doi:10.1111/1468-2427.12774).
Abstract
Whilst paid informal work has been conceptualized as a form of paid employment imbued with solely economic motivations, this article critically argues that such a market‐oriented reading fails to take into account alternative explanations for the existence of informal work practices. Using evidence from 50 interviews conducted within a Pakistani urban community in a northern UK city, this article, uses a mixed‐embeddedness perspective to highlight the importance of predominantly socially and culturally driven motives in the decision to engage in informal work. The findings highlight that participation in informal work, whilst a product of marginalization due to certain institutional and structural factors, is also driven by a range of non‐monetary motives—a result of certain socially embedded work relations between ethnic minority workers and their employers. It is this social embeddedness of the employer–employee relationship in the Pakistani ethnic minority community that explains the continuation of informal work practices in the face of prevailing laws and regulations. The findings add weight to the understanding of informal work as being about more than just economics and constraints, offering these ethnic minority workers opportunities, even status, and giving them agency in an otherwise disempowered situation.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 9 May 2019
Published date: May 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 442397
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/442397
ISSN: 0319-1317
PURE UUID: 3da7e479-3666-4062-9109-bfaf1cbe2d32
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Date deposited: 14 Jul 2020 16:38
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 08:34
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Author:
Peter Rodgers
Author:
Muhammad Shehryar Shahid
Author:
Colin Williams
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