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Contextualizing Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies and Developing Countries
Edited by Marcela Ramírez-Pasilla, Ethel Brundin and Magdalena Markowska
Entrepreneurship in emerging countries presents us with a unique set of working attitudes, modes of thinking, social practices and processes. This book explores these characteristics, focusing on the conceptualization of entrepreneurship ‘in-between’. It highlights top-down and bottom-up initiatives as well as driving forces for entrepreneurial activities in emerging economies and developing countries, presenting the diversity, nuances and multiplicity of facets of relevant but unexplored contexts that we need in order to expand our dominant and traditional understandings of entrepreneurship
Monograph Book
- Published in print:
- 31 Mar 2017
- ISBN:
- 9781785367526
- eISBN:
- 9781785367533
- Pages:
- c 384
Show Summary Details
- Contextualizing Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies and Developing Countries
- Copyright
- Contents
- Figures and tables
- Contributors
- Chapter 1: Contextualizing entrepreneurship in-between
- Chapter 2: The political economy of indigenous ethnic entrepreneurship: the Ethiopian experience
- Chapter 3: Who is really an ethnic minority? The puzzling paradox of the conceptualization of ethnic entrepreneurship
- Chapter 4: Women’s entrepreneurship in Rwanda: overcoming entrepreneurial stereotypes through government support
- Chapter 5: The impact of the institutional context on women’s entrepreneurship in Ethiopia: breaking the cycle of poverty?
- Chapter 6: Contextualizing entrepreneurship as an antidote to institutional evangelizing: diezmo and informal contract commissions in Mexico
- Chapter 7: Contextualizing universities for new venture creation: the case of family business students at the Tecnol—gico de Monterrey in Mexico
- Chapter 8: The discursive formation of ‘seriousness’ in the ship canal rat race between Panama, Mexico and Nicaragua
- Chapter 9: Jugaar as entrepreneurial resourcefulness
- Chapter 10: Contextualizing entrepreneurial networks in Ethiopia: the case of the Ekubs of the Gurage ethnic group
- Chapter 11: Contextualizing crowdfunding in low-income countries: the case of Pakistan
- Chapter 12: Exploring antecedents for new venture creation in Ethiopia
- Chapter 13: Contextualizing entrepreneurial opportunity creation as an outcome of social embeddedness
- Chapter 14: Exploring institutional entrepreneurship in developing countries—copreneurs in the tourism industry: a Bolivian case
- Chapter 15: The interplay between context and family business continuity in developing countries
- Chapter 16: Entrepreneurship in family businesses in Ethiopia
- Chapter 17: Placing the Ugandan entrepreneurship paradox in context
- Chapter 18: Barranquilla’s carnival: the place where identity meets societal entrepreneurship
- Chapter 19: New firms’ survival in Rwanda: an analysis of institutional and social contexts
- Chapter 20: Daring to be different: a case of entrepreneurial stewardship in a Guatemalan family’s coffee farm
- Chapter 21: Financial performance of family versus non-family firms in the context of an economy in turmoil: a market from ‘developed’ to ‘emerging’
- Chapter 22: A literature review of mixed-embeddedness for immigrant entrepreneurship: lessons for developing countries
- Chapter 23: Influences of immigrants from emerging economies and developing countries on immigrant entrepreneurship in Sweden
- Chapter 24: Epilogue: multiple embeddedness contexts for entrepreneurship
- Index
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Contributors
Monograph Chapter
- Published:
- 31 March 2017
- Category:
- Monograph Chapter
- Pages:
- xi–xx (10 total)
Collection:
Business 2017
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- Contextualizing Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies and Developing Countries
- Copyright
- Contents
- Figures and tables
- Contributors
- Chapter 1: Contextualizing entrepreneurship in-between
- Chapter 2: The political economy of indigenous ethnic entrepreneurship: the Ethiopian experience
- Chapter 3: Who is really an ethnic minority? The puzzling paradox of the conceptualization of ethnic entrepreneurship
- Chapter 4: Women’s entrepreneurship in Rwanda: overcoming entrepreneurial stereotypes through government support
- Chapter 5: The impact of the institutional context on women’s entrepreneurship in Ethiopia: breaking the cycle of poverty?
- Chapter 6: Contextualizing entrepreneurship as an antidote to institutional evangelizing: diezmo and informal contract commissions in Mexico
- Chapter 7: Contextualizing universities for new venture creation: the case of family business students at the Tecnol—gico de Monterrey in Mexico
- Chapter 8: The discursive formation of ‘seriousness’ in the ship canal rat race between Panama, Mexico and Nicaragua
- Chapter 9: Jugaar as entrepreneurial resourcefulness
- Chapter 10: Contextualizing entrepreneurial networks in Ethiopia: the case of the Ekubs of the Gurage ethnic group
- Chapter 11: Contextualizing crowdfunding in low-income countries: the case of Pakistan
- Chapter 12: Exploring antecedents for new venture creation in Ethiopia
- Chapter 13: Contextualizing entrepreneurial opportunity creation as an outcome of social embeddedness
- Chapter 14: Exploring institutional entrepreneurship in developing countries—copreneurs in the tourism industry: a Bolivian case
- Chapter 15: The interplay between context and family business continuity in developing countries
- Chapter 16: Entrepreneurship in family businesses in Ethiopia
- Chapter 17: Placing the Ugandan entrepreneurship paradox in context
- Chapter 18: Barranquilla’s carnival: the place where identity meets societal entrepreneurship
- Chapter 19: New firms’ survival in Rwanda: an analysis of institutional and social contexts
- Chapter 20: Daring to be different: a case of entrepreneurial stewardship in a Guatemalan family’s coffee farm
- Chapter 21: Financial performance of family versus non-family firms in the context of an economy in turmoil: a market from ‘developed’ to ‘emerging’
- Chapter 22: A literature review of mixed-embeddedness for immigrant entrepreneurship: lessons for developing countries
- Chapter 23: Influences of immigrants from emerging economies and developing countries on immigrant entrepreneurship in Sweden
- Chapter 24: Epilogue: multiple embeddedness contexts for entrepreneurship
- Index