Helping Out Children's Labor in Ethnic Businesses

Author/creator Song, Miri Author
Format Electronic
Publication InfoPhiladelphia : Temple University Press
Supplemental ContentFull text available from eBooks on EBSCOhost
Subjects

Summary Annotation The growing body of literature on ethnic businesses has emphasized the importance of small family-based businesses as a key form of immigrant adaptation. Although there have been numerous references to the importance of "family labor" as a key ethnic resource, few studies have examined the work roles and family dynamics entailed in various kinds of ethnic businesses. Helping Out addresses the centrality of children's labor participation in such family enterprises. Discussing the case of Chinese families running take-out food shops in Britain, Miri Song examines the ways in which children contribute their labor and the context in which children come to understand and believe in "helping out" as part of a "family work contract." Song explores the implications of these children's labor participation for family relationships, cultural identity, and the future of the Chinese community in Britain. While doing so, she argues that the practical importance and the broader meanings of children's work must be understood in the context of immigrant families' experiences of migration and ethnic minority status in Western, white-majority societies.
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Technical detailsMode of access: World Wide Web
Genre/formElectronic books.
ISBN9781439906187
ISBN1439906181 (E-Book) Active Record
Stock number00025936

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