wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/aab35b2a89b1c0b65db817ad37bf8a6a-rouse-j-and-kitchin/info.yaml

82 lines
2.6 KiB
YAML

abstract: 'Using data from a longitudinal study of working-class participants on a
youth enterprise start-up programme in the United Kingdom, we examine
whether programmes aimed at disadvantaged groups enable parents to
combine business trading with childcare responsibilities. Business
planning and programme selection practices ignored childcare, rendering
it a solely private matter, invisible to public scrutiny. Yet this
childcare barrier became both a cause and a consequence of business
failure. Participants'' experiences of combining trading and childcare
varied by gender. All mothers and one father had complex strategies for
synchronising trading and childcare responsibilities. However, these
strategies soon collapsed, contributing to business closure. Most
fathers relied on the childrens'' mother to organise and conduct
continuous care, but this was dependent on fathers becoming breadwinners
through profitable trading which was not achieved. There is growing
policy recognition of the importance of the childcare barrier to paid
work for lower income families and for self-employed women in the United
Kingdom. However, despite recent initiatives, severe constraints remain
for working-class parents to start and manage a business. Several
implications for policy are discussed.'
affiliation: 'Rouse, J (Corresponding Author), Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Ctr Enterprise,
Aytoun Bldg,Aytoun St, Manchester M1 3GH, Lancs, England.
Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Ctr Enterprise, Manchester M1 3GH, Lancs, England.
Kingston Univ, Small Business Res Ctr, Surrey KT1 7LB, England.'
author: Rouse, J and Kitching, J
author-email: 'j.rouse@mmu.uk
j.kitching@kingston.ac.uk'
author_list:
- family: Rouse
given: J
- family: Kitching
given: J
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.1068/c0528
eissn: 1472-3425
files: []
issn: 0263-774X
journal: ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING C-GOVERNMENT AND POLICY
keywords-plus: FAMILY
language: English
month: FEB
note: 'Conference of the Institute-for-Small-Business-and-Entrepreneurship,
Univ Tesside, Newcastle, ENGLAND, 2004'
number: '1'
number-of-cited-references: '42'
orcid-numbers: Kitching, John/0000-0002-2709-1008
pages: 5-19
papis_id: a97f894f551831c3dab06bb68a3351c7
ref: Rouse2006doenterprise
researcherid-numbers: 'Peter, Serin/ITR-8938-2023
'
times-cited: '50'
title: Do enterprise support programmes leave women holding the baby?
type: article
unique-id: WOS:000235608100002
usage-count-last-180-days: '0'
usage-count-since-2013: '12'
volume: '24'
web-of-science-categories: Environmental Studies; Public Administration
year: '2006'