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Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village
Sociology and Political Science
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spelling Ann Snyder, Karrie 0038-0245 1475-682X Wiley Sociology and Political Science http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1475-682x.00057 <jats:p>Most research on the informal economy concentrates on how the informal economy operates at the international and regional levels along with the formal economy and the state. This article departs from current research on the informal economy by looking at how the informal economy operates within the lives of its participants. It considers how informal workers use informal work as both an economic and an identity resource. Informal workers create informal careers and informal work environments in accordance with financial and identity goals and needs. The intersection of informal work as an identity resource and as an economic resource creates a typology of informal market participation types. Among a group of self‐employed workers in New York City's East Village neighborhood, four patterns of informal market participation emerge: Entrepreneur, Occupier, Avocationalist, and Allowance Seeker.</jats:p> Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village Sociological Inquiry
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title Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village
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title_short Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village
title_sort working “off the books”: patterns of informal market participation within new york's east village
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spelling Ann Snyder, Karrie 0038-0245 1475-682X Wiley Sociology and Political Science http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1475-682x.00057 <jats:p>Most research on the informal economy concentrates on how the informal economy operates at the international and regional levels along with the formal economy and the state. This article departs from current research on the informal economy by looking at how the informal economy operates within the lives of its participants. It considers how informal workers use informal work as both an economic and an identity resource. Informal workers create informal careers and informal work environments in accordance with financial and identity goals and needs. The intersection of informal work as an identity resource and as an economic resource creates a typology of informal market participation types. Among a group of self‐employed workers in New York City's East Village neighborhood, four patterns of informal market participation emerge: Entrepreneur, Occupier, Avocationalist, and Allowance Seeker.</jats:p> Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village Sociological Inquiry
spellingShingle Ann Snyder, Karrie, Sociological Inquiry, Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village, Sociology and Political Science
title Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village
title_full Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village
title_fullStr Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village
title_full_unstemmed Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village
title_short Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village
title_sort working “off the books”: patterns of informal market participation within new york's east village
title_unstemmed Working “Off the Books”: Patterns of Informal Market Participation within New York's East Village
topic Sociology and Political Science
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1475-682x.00057