Market-based resistance: how migrant social enterprises navigate hostile institutional environments
Market-based resistance: how migrant social enterprises navigate hostile institutional environments
This paper examines how migrant-led social enterprises (MSEs) use market mechanisms as tools of everyday resistance in increasingly hostile environments. Drawing on qualitative longitudinal research conducted between 2015 and 2022, we assess how Pinewood, a UK-based migrant social enterprise, navigated profound institutional changes through innovative organisational practices. Our theoretical approach synthesises ‘mixed embeddedness theory’ with ‘everyday resistance’ scholarship to reveal how MSEs maintain legitimacy and pursue social transformation. The analysis identifies three key mechanisms through which market-based resistance operates: strategic professionalisation, innovative service development, and the creation of alternative economic networks. These mechanisms emerged through organisational responses to critical incidents, including the 2015 refugee crisis, Brexit-related turbulence, and COVID-19 adaptations. The study advances understanding of how migrant-led organisations engage in everyday resistance through market mechanisms, contributing to debates on migrant enterprise, institutional navigation, and social change within hostile migration regimes.
Villares-Varela, Maria
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Ram, Monder
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Qin, Shuai
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Arriaga Garcia, Gerardo Javier
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Villares-Varela, Maria
5e63e77d-525f-4196-8be8-e8c7db56eae1
Ram, Monder
6d3570c9-9501-413b-9864-8920723580b8
Qin, Shuai
776088e1-cc1f-495c-885f-da129f9854da
Arriaga Garcia, Gerardo Javier
de6e2027-2edc-4ca1-89d4-0fe62887482c
Villares-Varela, Maria, Ram, Monder, Qin, Shuai and Arriaga Garcia, Gerardo Javier
(2025)
Market-based resistance: how migrant social enterprises navigate hostile institutional environments.
Ethnic and Racial Studies.
(doi:10.1080/01419870.2025.2570399#abstract).
Abstract
This paper examines how migrant-led social enterprises (MSEs) use market mechanisms as tools of everyday resistance in increasingly hostile environments. Drawing on qualitative longitudinal research conducted between 2015 and 2022, we assess how Pinewood, a UK-based migrant social enterprise, navigated profound institutional changes through innovative organisational practices. Our theoretical approach synthesises ‘mixed embeddedness theory’ with ‘everyday resistance’ scholarship to reveal how MSEs maintain legitimacy and pursue social transformation. The analysis identifies three key mechanisms through which market-based resistance operates: strategic professionalisation, innovative service development, and the creation of alternative economic networks. These mechanisms emerged through organisational responses to critical incidents, including the 2015 refugee crisis, Brexit-related turbulence, and COVID-19 adaptations. The study advances understanding of how migrant-led organisations engage in everyday resistance through market mechanisms, contributing to debates on migrant enterprise, institutional navigation, and social change within hostile migration regimes.
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 September 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 October 2025
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Local EPrints ID: 506350
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506350
ISSN: 0141-9870
PURE UUID: eed16452-4c10-4ff2-ae46-871651c24e01
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Date deposited: 04 Nov 2025 18:17
Last modified: 05 Nov 2025 02:51
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Author:
Monder Ram
Author:
Shuai Qin
Author:
Gerardo Javier Arriaga Garcia
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