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Reinventing Traditional Solutions: Job Creation, Gender and the Micro-Business Household

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  • Susan Baines

    (University of Newcastle upon Tyne)

  • Jane Wheelock

    (University of Newcastle upon Tyne)

Abstract

There has been overwhelming interest in the numbers of jobs attributable to the formation and growth of new small firms but comparative silence about their working practices. We offer two novel, inter-linked approaches to thinking about work and employment in small firms. Firstly, we use a methodological approach which takes a household level analysis as a starting point, making gender a foundation stone. Secondly, we use an institutional perspective which focuses on power and power relations. From quantitative and qualitative empirical work with micro-businesses in business services we show that family work can be a vital resource. Yet there can also be severe costs, particularly for the many women who participate in business alongside their husbands as co-owners, employees and unpaid helpers. Gender divisions of labour are, typically, reproduced in traditional fashion. Even when business owners bring in employees from outside the family, relations within the micro-business are not fully market relations. Conflicts arise as business/owners and their employees struggle to manage these partially decommodified relations. The micro-business service sector actually represents a return to traditional ways of organising business by integrating business and household so that the traditional embedding of business and family of in-between pre-modern institutions is reinvented.

Suggested Citation

  • Susan Baines & Jane Wheelock, 1998. "Reinventing Traditional Solutions: Job Creation, Gender and the Micro-Business Household," Work, Employment & Society, British Sociological Association, vol. 12(4), pages 579-601, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:woemps:v:12:y:1998:i:4:p:579-601
    DOI: 10.1177/0950017098124001
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Hart, Mark & Hanvey, Eric, 1995. "Job Generation and New and Small Firms: Some Evidence from the Late 1980s," Small Business Economics, Springer, vol. 7(2), pages 97-109, April.
    2. Åge Mariussen & Jane Wheelock & Susan Baines, 1997. "The Family Business Tradition in Britain and Norway," International Studies of Management & Organization, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 27(3), pages 64-85, September.
    3. William Waller & Ann Jennings, 1991. "A Feminist Institutionalist Reconsideration of Karl Polanyi," Journal of Economic Issues, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 25(2), pages 485-497, June.
    4. Jane Wheelock & Elizabeth Oughton, 1996. "The Household as a Focus for Research," Journal of Economic Issues, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 30(1), pages 143-159, March.
    5. Pollak, Robert A, 1985. "A Transaction Cost Approach to Families and Households," Journal of Economic Literature, American Economic Association, vol. 23(2), pages 581-608, June.
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    Cited by:

    1. Ian Worthington & Monder Ram & Trevor Jones, 2006. "Exploring Corporate Social Responsibility in the U.K. Asian Small Business Community," Journal of Business Ethics, Springer, vol. 67(2), pages 201-217, August.
    2. Syed Awais Ahmad Tipu, 2012. "What have we learned? Themes from the literature on necessity driven entrepreneurship," World Review of Entrepreneurship, Management and Sustainable Development, Inderscience Enterprises Ltd, vol. 8(1), pages 70-91.

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