Abstract
PurposeAn increase in informal job advertisements has been attributed to high unemployment. However, less scholarly attention has been placed on the experiences of victims of advertised job scams.Design/methodology/approachThis explorative study investigates the lived experiences of victims of advertised job scams in Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria, adopting Durkheim’s Functionalism and Anomie Theory. Around 35 victims were purposively engaged in in-depth and telephone interviews.FindingsThe findings of the study indicated the link between functionalism and anomie, an increasing rate of advertised job scams and a high rate of unemployment and poverty as well as the desperation of victims in getting jobs. The value orientation of an individual is determined by the dynamics of the social institutions. The pattern of job scammers revealed extremists conditioned by the large number of youths seeking employment. The advertised scam jobs are usually unavailable. In addition, employers, through informal job advertisements, subject victims to extortions, exploitation, street begging, kidnapping and rituals as well as sexual harassment and rape. Owing to the high rate of unemployment, many genuine job offers are characterised by bribes, besides trivializing merit.Originality/valueThe government should design measures to tackle the rate of corruption and unemployment. This can be achieved by introducing entrepreneurship and skill acquisition programmes in the nation’s education system.
Reference37 articles.
1. Social networking and access to jobs in Sub-Saharan Africa: an inquiry into the ‘Ima Mmadu’ theorem;OIDA International Journal of Sustainable Development,2021
2. The influence of socio-economic characteristics on satisfaction in selected universities students’ hostels in southwestern, Nigeria;American Journal of Computer Architecture,2018
3. Online frauds: learning from victim, why they fall for these Scam;Journal of Criminology,2014