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Perspectives, progress, and prospects: researching women’s entrepreneurship in emerging economies

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Perspectives, progress, and prospects: researching women’s entrepreneurship in emerging economies. / Anderson, Alistair; Ojediran, Funmi.
In: Journal of Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies, Vol. 14, No. 2, 28.02.2022, p. 292-315.

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Anderson A, Ojediran F. Perspectives, progress, and prospects: researching women’s entrepreneurship in emerging economies. Journal of Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies. 2022 Feb 28;14(2):292-315. Epub 2021 May 28. doi: 10.1108/JEEE-07-2020-0214

Author

Anderson, Alistair ; Ojediran, Funmi. / Perspectives, progress, and prospects : researching women’s entrepreneurship in emerging economies. In: Journal of Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies. 2022 ; Vol. 14, No. 2. pp. 292-315.

Bibtex

@article{205d0cbc9d49422cab3f54802f399c33,
title = "Perspectives, progress, and prospects: researching women{\textquoteright}s entrepreneurship in emerging economies",
abstract = "PurposeWe critically review the literature on women{\textquoteright}s entrepreneurship in emerging economies. This is a thematic review to identify patterns and trends to better understand this literature. From our analysis, we offer ideas for useful and theoretically informed future work. DesignWe identify the nature, what is interesting, what it sees as important and consider what is neglected in this literature. Our analysis sought important issues, interesting directions and the potential for useful future work. Thematic analysis is ideal for messy and unstructured material such as the literature employed in this study as the data set. The process is qualitative, iterative and inductive but ontologically appropriate for the socially produced knowledge of the literature.FindingsWe found the literature tends towards descriptive papers. Few papers make substantial contributions to theory. Many papers reported the barriers women encounter, reporting general and typical processes of responding to obstacles and the implications for practice. Interestingly we perceived overcoming, and sometimes using, the cultural and physical restraints of gendered entrepreneurship. We propose the concept of restricted agency explain the gendering of entrepreneuring. Limited agency explains what they can do. Moreover, the concept helps explain why and what. Most promising theoretically, is how the application of this agency is slowly, and contextually differently changing the rules of the game. OriginalityWe start out with the notion of the {\textquoteleft}otherness{\textquoteright} of women{\textquoteright}s entrepreneurship. The literature is good at explaining both how and why women{\textquoteright}s entrepreneurship is different and in effect, marginalised. We conceptualise this gendering process as restricted agency. We offer informed and relatively novel avenues for further research. ",
keywords = "Developing theory, Female entrepreneurship, Developing countries, women's entrepreneurship, Restricted agency",
author = "Alistair Anderson and Funmi Ojediran",
note = "This article is (c) Emerald Group Publishing and permission has been granted for this version to appear here. Emerald does not grant permission for this article to be further copied/distributed or hosted elsewhere without the express permission from Emerald Group Publishing Limited. ",
year = "2022",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1108/JEEE-07-2020-0214",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "292--315",
journal = "Journal of Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Perspectives, progress, and prospects

T2 - researching women’s entrepreneurship in emerging economies

AU - Anderson, Alistair

AU - Ojediran, Funmi

N1 - This article is (c) Emerald Group Publishing and permission has been granted for this version to appear here. Emerald does not grant permission for this article to be further copied/distributed or hosted elsewhere without the express permission from Emerald Group Publishing Limited.

PY - 2022/2/28

Y1 - 2022/2/28

N2 - PurposeWe critically review the literature on women’s entrepreneurship in emerging economies. This is a thematic review to identify patterns and trends to better understand this literature. From our analysis, we offer ideas for useful and theoretically informed future work. DesignWe identify the nature, what is interesting, what it sees as important and consider what is neglected in this literature. Our analysis sought important issues, interesting directions and the potential for useful future work. Thematic analysis is ideal for messy and unstructured material such as the literature employed in this study as the data set. The process is qualitative, iterative and inductive but ontologically appropriate for the socially produced knowledge of the literature.FindingsWe found the literature tends towards descriptive papers. Few papers make substantial contributions to theory. Many papers reported the barriers women encounter, reporting general and typical processes of responding to obstacles and the implications for practice. Interestingly we perceived overcoming, and sometimes using, the cultural and physical restraints of gendered entrepreneurship. We propose the concept of restricted agency explain the gendering of entrepreneuring. Limited agency explains what they can do. Moreover, the concept helps explain why and what. Most promising theoretically, is how the application of this agency is slowly, and contextually differently changing the rules of the game. OriginalityWe start out with the notion of the ‘otherness’ of women’s entrepreneurship. The literature is good at explaining both how and why women’s entrepreneurship is different and in effect, marginalised. We conceptualise this gendering process as restricted agency. We offer informed and relatively novel avenues for further research.

AB - PurposeWe critically review the literature on women’s entrepreneurship in emerging economies. This is a thematic review to identify patterns and trends to better understand this literature. From our analysis, we offer ideas for useful and theoretically informed future work. DesignWe identify the nature, what is interesting, what it sees as important and consider what is neglected in this literature. Our analysis sought important issues, interesting directions and the potential for useful future work. Thematic analysis is ideal for messy and unstructured material such as the literature employed in this study as the data set. The process is qualitative, iterative and inductive but ontologically appropriate for the socially produced knowledge of the literature.FindingsWe found the literature tends towards descriptive papers. Few papers make substantial contributions to theory. Many papers reported the barriers women encounter, reporting general and typical processes of responding to obstacles and the implications for practice. Interestingly we perceived overcoming, and sometimes using, the cultural and physical restraints of gendered entrepreneurship. We propose the concept of restricted agency explain the gendering of entrepreneuring. Limited agency explains what they can do. Moreover, the concept helps explain why and what. Most promising theoretically, is how the application of this agency is slowly, and contextually differently changing the rules of the game. OriginalityWe start out with the notion of the ‘otherness’ of women’s entrepreneurship. The literature is good at explaining both how and why women’s entrepreneurship is different and in effect, marginalised. We conceptualise this gendering process as restricted agency. We offer informed and relatively novel avenues for further research.

KW - Developing theory

KW - Female entrepreneurship

KW - Developing countries

KW - women's entrepreneurship

KW - Restricted agency

U2 - 10.1108/JEEE-07-2020-0214

DO - 10.1108/JEEE-07-2020-0214

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

SP - 292

EP - 315

JO - Journal of Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies

JF - Journal of Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies

IS - 2

ER -