<p>There is little doubt that in recent years, enterprise has been considered an essential approach in the alleviation of deprivation existing in the developed world. The assumption is that area-based initiatives provide a means by which enterprise can include all members of society in mainstream social and economic activities. The rationale behind <em>Enterprise, Deprivation and Social Exclusion</em> is to critically challenge the notion that enterprise can address the complexity behind deprivation and social exclusion by demonstrating UK and North American examples. </p><p>We see how enterprise has come to be regarded as a means by which poverty can be reduced and new opportunities can be opened up to support individuals. However, the authors here seek to give a greater appreciation to the structural roots of deprivation and pose questions about whether or not enterprise might actually exacerbate structures of social and economic exclusion. What if enterprise actually maintains differences between types of community and keeps individuals entrenched in certain ways of thinking? The contributions in this edited collection will offer a distinct opportunity in respect of both theoretical and empirical advancement. The authors hale from both sides of the Atlantic and form an inter-disciplinary group to provide complementary perspectives in this field. </p> <p>1. Introduction: Enterprise and Deprivation. <em>Alan Southern</em> 2. Enterprise: A Route Out of Disadvantage and Deprivation? <em>Julian Frankish, Richard Roberts and David Storey</em> 3. Blind Faith: Entrepreneurship and the Revitalization of Inner-City Minority Communities. <em>Timothy Bates and Alicia Robb</em> 4. Ethnic Entrepreneurs and Urban Regeneration. <em>Trevor Jones and Monder Ram</em> 5. Race, Space, and the Dynamics of Self-Employment. <em>Casey J. Dawkins</em> 6. All Underserved Markets Are Not Created Equal: Why the Private Sector Alone Will Not Address the Capital Needs Have Distressed Us Communities. <em>Julia Sass Rubin</em> 7. Access to Finance in Deprived Areas: Has the Government Lost Interest?<em> Karl Dayson</em> 8. Working Life in Rural Micro-Enterprises: Old Forms of Organisation in the New Economy. <em>Susan Baines, Jane Wheelock and Elizabeth Oughton</em> 9. Entrepreneurship, Social Exclusion and Worklessness. <em>Simon Pemberton</em> 10. The Hidden Enterprise Culture. <em>Colin C. Williams</em> 11. Locating Enterprise and Placing Wealth: Entrepreneurship and Place-Based Enterprises in Depleted Communities. <em>Doug Lionais</em> 12. Discursive Chasms: An Examination of the Language and Promotion of Social Enterprise. <em>Carole Howorth, Caroline Parkinson and Matthew MacDonald</em> 13. Can The Market Deliver The Goods? A Critical Review of the Social Enterprise Agenda. <em>Geoff Whittam and Kean Birch</em> 14. Micro-Enterprise and Cooperative Development in Economically Marginalized Communities in the US. <em>Jessica Gordon Nembhard</em> 15. Alternative Forms of Enterprise. <em>Peter North</em> 16. Conclusion: The Role of Enterprise in Addressing Social and Economic Inequalities. <em>Alan Southern and Caroline Parkinson</em></p>
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