Social support for improved work integration: Perspectives from Canadian social purpose enterprises
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to explore the ways in which social supports can promote enduring attachments to work and improve overall well-being of disadvantaged workers, within the context of social purpose enterprises.
Design/methodology/approach
With coordinators, managers and directors as informants, this mixed-methods study uses a survey and interviews to establish the availability and importance of different social supports found in social purpose enterprises across Canada, and to explore the reasons for such support mobilization and the influences that determine whether social supports are sought or accepted.
Findings
Findings substantiate the prevalence and importance of work-centred social supports. Social supports can promote more sustainable attachment to work by addressing work process challenges, ameliorating workplace conflict, attending to non-vocational work barriers and building workers’ self-confidence and self-belief. The source of a support, as well as the relationship between support providers and recipients, contributes to whether supports will be beneficial to recipients.
Research limitations/implications
Future studies require corroboration directly from the employees and training participants of social purpose enterprises. The limitations on the sampling and the survey response rate may limit generalizability of findings.
Practical implications
Findings contribute to knowledge on more effective social support provision for improved work outcomes and overall well-being of employees and training participants.
Originality/value
Applying theory from social support research brings greater clarity to the potential of work-centred supports for addressing both vocational and non-vocational barriers to employment and job training for disadvantaged workers.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The author gratefully acknowledge all research participants for their contribution to this study. The author thanks Jack Quarter and the anonymous reviewers for their invaluable feedback on this paper.
Citation
Chan, A.N.W. (2015), "Social support for improved work integration: Perspectives from Canadian social purpose enterprises", Social Enterprise Journal, Vol. 11 No. 1, pp. 47-68. https://doi.org/10.1108/SEJ-07-2014-0033
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited