Purpose: The paper aims to consider whether social enterprise, who are growing in number and seemingly a politically popular alternative to mainstream employment are a potential conduit for social change. Discussions relating to the value of (stable) employment in reducing and preventing (re)offending are not new. For many ex-offenders, a multitude of barriers stand between them and access to the labour market. As a potential conduit for social change, social enterprises are a growing and seemingly politically popular alternative to mainstream employment. Design/methodology/approach: Focusing on the qualitative lived experiences of young people (aged between 16 and 18) with criminal convictions enrolled in one such enterprise, this paper ex...
The Probation Service has, for some years, worked with external service providers in partnership. On...
Increasing calls for 'nothing about us without us' envision marginalised people as valuable and nece...
Purpose: Serious organised crime (SOC) costs the UK billions of pounds every year and is associated ...
While the significance of employment to desistance (giving up crime) is well established, there are ...
While numbers of first-time entrants have decreased dramatically in the last decade, young people re...
Prison numbers have risen across the UK over the last decade despite a reduction in crime rates. Yet...
A post-industrial 'precariat' has emerged characterised by social insecurity to which the state's re...
The emergence of social enterprises (SEs) within criminal justice jurisdictions across Europe has in...
In this Foreword to the special issue ‘In, Against and Beyond Precarity’ the guest editors take stoc...
Neither the literature on offending nor that on desistance adequately explains the short-term nature...
An analysis of injustice and social exclusion impacting upon the lives of young people in the sphere...
This paper investigates the roles played by social enterprise and social activism in mitigating acce...
This article examines youth transitions and youth offending in tandem. It argues that the transition...
Homelessness is a serious and growing problem in the UK, exacerbated by the COVID-19 crisis. The lat...
The digital PDF of Chapter 8 of this title is available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. The w...
The Probation Service has, for some years, worked with external service providers in partnership. On...
Increasing calls for 'nothing about us without us' envision marginalised people as valuable and nece...
Purpose: Serious organised crime (SOC) costs the UK billions of pounds every year and is associated ...
While the significance of employment to desistance (giving up crime) is well established, there are ...
While numbers of first-time entrants have decreased dramatically in the last decade, young people re...
Prison numbers have risen across the UK over the last decade despite a reduction in crime rates. Yet...
A post-industrial 'precariat' has emerged characterised by social insecurity to which the state's re...
The emergence of social enterprises (SEs) within criminal justice jurisdictions across Europe has in...
In this Foreword to the special issue ‘In, Against and Beyond Precarity’ the guest editors take stoc...
Neither the literature on offending nor that on desistance adequately explains the short-term nature...
An analysis of injustice and social exclusion impacting upon the lives of young people in the sphere...
This paper investigates the roles played by social enterprise and social activism in mitigating acce...
This article examines youth transitions and youth offending in tandem. It argues that the transition...
Homelessness is a serious and growing problem in the UK, exacerbated by the COVID-19 crisis. The lat...
The digital PDF of Chapter 8 of this title is available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. The w...
The Probation Service has, for some years, worked with external service providers in partnership. On...
Increasing calls for 'nothing about us without us' envision marginalised people as valuable and nece...
Purpose: Serious organised crime (SOC) costs the UK billions of pounds every year and is associated ...