New research conducted by the University of East Anglia (UEA) reveals a transformative approach to tackling long-term unemployment in deprived areas, emphasizing the superior effectiveness of third-sector services compared to traditional government work programs. These third-sector entities, including housing associations and social enterprises, offer a holistic and sustained support system oriented around the realities of vulnerable individuals. Their person-centred, strength-based methodologies not only facilitate access to employment but also promote overall wellbeing among those furthest from the labour market.
The study, published in the Journal of European Social Policy, challenges the prevailing “work-first” paradigm dominant in governmental initiatives by advocating for a shift towards long-term, community-embedded services. Instead of merely generating job placements, the research stresses the importance of nurturing individual potential by recognising existing skills and aspirations. This approach fundamentally reframes unemployment support from a transactional event—where job starts measure success—to a dynamic, ongoing process that values progress and resilience throughout the employment journey.
One of the pivotal factors underscored by the findings is the role of strength-focused engagement. Traditional programmes often concentrate on deficits or barriers, inadvertently reinforcing stigma or discouraging participants. In contrast, effective third-sector services actively build on capabilities and ambitions, creating a foundation for empowerment. This reframing cultivates greater motivation and ensures that clients are not passive recipients but active agents driving their own transition towards meaningful employment.
Longevity in support also emerges as a critical determinant of success. The research highlights that consistent and reliable engagement over extended periods allows service providers to respond adaptively to the complex and evolving challenges faced by individuals. Such continuity fosters trust, which is indispensable in reaching those who may be sceptical of institutional help due to previous negative experiences or entrenched social exclusion.
Embedding services within deprived communities offers further advantages by leveraging local knowledge and networks. Housing associations and similar organisations capitalize on their existing presence and relationships to broker impactful partnerships with local employers, education providers, and regeneration initiatives. This localized anchoring enables more tailored, context-sensitive interventions that resonate with community needs and labour market dynamics, enhancing both accessibility and relevance.
The inadequacy of government-run programs to provide the personalised, sustained support necessary for the hardest-to-reach is a recurrent theme in the study. These programmes tend to prioritise quantitative metrics such as the number of job starts or sanctions imposed, which often overlook the qualitative nature of clients’ journeys. The research advocates for policy reform that reallocates public investment towards third-sector organisations proven to offer adaptable, client-focused services grounded in lived experience.
A striking aspect of the UEA-led project is its transnational dimension, evaluating initiatives in both Northwest France and Southeast England. This EU-funded analysis draws from extensive qualitative data comprised of interviews with service providers and users, complemented by quantitative training and employment outcomes collected over five years (2018-2023). The findings underscore that fostering entrepreneurship and self-employment—alongside traditional employment—is a vital pathway for reintegration into the labour market.
Quantitative results from this cohort are compelling: of over 6,000 clients who engaged in at least twelve hours of training, 16% launched businesses, 18% secured new employment, and 7% pursued further education. Particularly noteworthy is the instrumental role of housing associations in facilitating guaranteed interviews with local employers for trained clients. By coordinating training for essential certifications such as security and food hygiene, these associations bridge skills gaps and enhance employability in sectors aligned with local economic growth.
The research further elucidates how setbacks, often viewed as failures within standard employment programs, are reframed as opportunities for learning and resilience building under third-sector models. Clients benefit from mentoring, role modeling, and continuous follow-up that underpin adaptive learning. This approach mitigates the risks of repeated disengagement by acknowledging the non-linear and multifaceted nature of employment journeys in deprived contexts.
Addressing the multifarious barriers to employment—including childcare needs, health issues, addiction, and homelessness—is a hallmark of the third-sector’s holistic support paradigm. Unlike government schemes with prescriptive and time-limited engagements, these organisations leverage local resources and partnerships to offer tailored solutions that extend beyond workforce entry, focusing on sustainable integration and empowerment.
Professor Zografia Bika, lead author of the study, articulates a crucial paradigm shift in employment support philosophy. Rather than treating job acquisition as a singular “turning point,” the research champions sustained engagement that adapts to the evolving realities of individuals. The core metric of success becomes the “distance travelled” along personalized pathways, prioritizing incremental gains and capacity building over immediate employment statistics.
The research implications extend into policy design, resource allocation, and service delivery frameworks, calling for a realignment of priorities towards community-centred, long-term support models. To achieve meaningful reductions in long-term unemployment within deprived areas, governments must embed flexibility, person-centredness, and local embeddedness into programmes, or else risk perpetuating cycles of exclusion.
In conclusion, this rigorous investigation highlights that combating persistent unemployment requires more than job placement targets and sanction regimes. Third-sector-led models, exemplified by housing associations in England and France, offer a replicable blueprint combining strengths-based support, community integration, and sustained mentorship. Public investment embracing these principles promises not only to enhance employment outcomes but also to uplift the broader social fabric within deprived neighborhoods.
Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Theorising ‘best practice’ for supporting those furthest from the market into work or self-employment in France and England
News Publication Date: 10-Oct-2025
Web References: https://doi.org/10.1177/09589287251384936
References: Bika, Z., Locke, C., Orlandi, C. M., & Valcke, B. (2025). Theorising ‘best practice’ for supporting those furthest from the market into work or self-employment in France and England. Journal of European Social Policy. https://doi.org/10.1177/09589287251384936
Keywords: long-term unemployment, third-sector services, housing associations, person-centred support, strength-based approach, community embeddedness, employment pathways, social enterprises, sustainable integration, mentoring, EU-funded project