The Role of Shared Resilience in Building Employment Pathways with People with a Disability

Author:

Campbell Perri1,Wilson Erin1ORCID,Howie Luke John2,Joyce Andrew1,Crosbie Jenny1,Eversole Robyn3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Social Impact, School of Business, Law and Entrepreneurship, Swinburne University of Technology, Hawthorn 3122, Australia

2. School of Education, Deakin University, Geelong 3216, Australia

3. Freeman College of Management, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, PA 17837, USA

Abstract

For workers living with a disability, pathways to sustainable employment in the open labour market are inhibited by barriers operating at different structural and societal levels. The culture of Australia’s government employment services has applied a ‘work-first’ approach that emphasises finding people employment rather than supporting the acquisition of skills and education. The net effect of this approach is the preferencing of short-term employment solutions, with a focus on individual behaviour or so-called resilience and an emphasis on personal responsibility instead of addressing structural issues. In this paper, we explore how people with disability can be supported in finding employment through a shared resilience approach offered by a Work Integration Social Enterprise (WISE). We suggest that WISEs can provide the conditions for shared resilience by developing and sustaining networks needed to generate hybrid pathways to work and by role modelling inclusive work conditions in the open labour market.

Funder

Department of Social Services

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference45 articles.

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