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Sociology as a Strategy of Support for Long-Term Unemployed Workers

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Abstract

In recent years workers in the United States have become increasingly vulnerable to spells of long-term unemployment, which are often accompanied by self-devaluation and the internalization of stigma. The existing literature consistently finds that dominant self-help career support institutions activate individualistic cultural narratives that obscure the shared and structural determinants of career challenges and often intensify the self-stigmatization and emotional toll of long-term unemployment. This paper examines an alternative approach to support based on sociologically-informed discourses and practices. Drawing on in-depth interviews of long-term unemployed white-collar workers who received such support we explore whether and how sociologically-informed support practices can reduce self-stigmatization and help workers confront the challenges posed by long-term unemployment. We show that self-stigmatization is not an inevitable outcome of unemployment in the American cultural context, and that the application of a sociologically-informed approach to support can activate narratives focused on the shared and structural roots of unemployment. The activation of such narratives counteracts the debilitating internalization of stigma and generates what we call a “re-valuation” of the self. Beyond long-term unemployment, the findings in this paper suggest broader benefits to American workers from institutions that foster a sociological imagination for contextualizing employment-related challenges.

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Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the AARP Foundation for funding that made this research possible, and acknowledge the vital contribution to this research by the career coaches and counseloors who volunteered their time to lend their expertise and support our participating job seekers including Amy Mazur, Deborah Burkholder, Rachelle Lappinen, Deb Elbaum, Cath Amory, Mark Biddle, Matt Casey, Arnold Clickstein, Robert Dolan, Nancy Dube, Maggie French, Allyn Gardner, Tammy Gooler Loeb, Calre Harlow, Patricia Wakefield, Kit Hayes, Cindy Key, Pam Lassiter, Ed Lawrence, Debbie Lipton, Tom McDonough, Sara Pacelle, Bonnie Petrovich, Martha Plotkin, Ilene Rudman, Lisa Shapiro,  Gail Liebhaber, and Robin Slavin.

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Correspondence to Ofer Sharone.

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Sharone, O., Vasquez, A. Sociology as a Strategy of Support for Long-Term Unemployed Workers. Am Soc 48, 246–265 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12108-016-9321-1

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