Details

Women Entrepreneurship Policy


Women Entrepreneurship Policy

Context, Theory, and Practice

von: Léo-Paul Dana, Meghna Chhabra

CHF 177.00

Verlag: Springer
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 08.07.2024
ISBN/EAN: 9789819736072
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

<p>This book focuses on the importance of women’s entrepreneurship policy in the entrepreneurial ecosystem. The book’s contributions demonstrate a link between the nature of policy implications, the various theoretical perspectives used, and whether scholars’ policy implications have transformed as the field of women’s entrepreneurship study has advanced. The book looks deeper into the reasons why there seems to be a big gap between formal women’s entrepreneurship legislation and actual business support services. What can be done to close policy and program gaps? What can government policy do to foster an entrepreneur-friendly environment? What level and form of government intervention in the economy should be to attain this goal? These issues have been hotly debated for a long time, and this book seeks answers to these questions. An institutional approach to analysing government policies is encouraged because macro-level regulations, social norms, and culture influence fostering women’s entrepreneurial activities. The book and its contributions draw on gender and institutional theory to recommend policy initiatives and measures to combat the lower entrepreneurship rates among the women population. Researchers and policymakers will benefit significantly from this book since it contains ideas for improving policy measures, the entrepreneurial ecosystem for women, and areas for further research. Women entrepreneurs have different motives and goals than men when starting a business.</p>
<p>Emerging Institutional Paradigms and Capacity Building of Entrepreneurs: An Analysis of Women-Owned Business Enterprises in Contemporary India.- From Start to Success: Women Entrepreneurs Navigating the Entrepreneurial Ecosystem in Bangladesh.- Measuring the Socioeconomic Status of Women Entrepreneurs in the Indian Informal Sector.- Policies and Measures for Women Entrepreneurship Development in Türkiye.- Challenges of Stakeholder Engagement for Women Entrepreneurship – a Qualitative Study on Women entrepreneurs in India.- Synchronous perspective on the women entrepreneurship challenges in developing countries upon reviewing the gender and contingency theories.- Women's entrepreneurship policy: enhancing female business ownership in the digital era.- Determinants Influencing Women Entrepreneurship: An Analysis of Challenges and Opportunities.- Gender Barriers Experienced by Women Entrepreneurs in Cyprus .- Barriers facing by female entrepreneurs: A conceptual study.- Entrepreneurial competencies of Successful indigenous women entrepreneurs and their impact on poverty alleviation.- Female Entrepreneurship, Institutional Support and Accomplishments: A Review.- Leadership Behaviours of Women Entrepreneurs of the Rural and Backward Society in Managing the Challenges of Socio-cultural Roles.- Empowering the Underprivileged Women: Exploring Entrepreneurial Opportunities with Microfinance.</p>
<p><strong>Léo-Paul DANA</strong> is &nbsp; Visiting Professor at&nbsp;Lappeenranta&nbsp;University of Technology and affiliated with Sorbonne Business School.&nbsp;&nbsp;A&nbsp;graduate of McGill University and HEC-Montreal, he has served as&nbsp;Marie Curie Fellow at Princeton University and Visiting Professor at INSEAD.&nbsp;&nbsp;He has published extensively in a variety of journals including:&nbsp;<em>&nbsp;Entrepreneurship: Theory &amp; Practice;</em>&nbsp;<em>International Business Review; International Small Business Journal; Journal of Business Research; Journal of Small Business Management;</em>&nbsp;<em>Journal of World Business;</em>&nbsp;<em>Small Business Economics;&nbsp;</em>and&nbsp;<em>Technological Forecasting &amp; Social Change</em>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>

<p><strong>Dr. Meghna Chhabra </strong>is a Professor at the Delhi School of Business, Vivekananda Institute of Professional Studies, New Delhi. She is an academician with over 15 years of teaching and corporate experience. She has done her executive education in “Design Thinking” from Stanford University Graduate School of Business. Her research interests include Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and Sustainability.&nbsp;Her recent editorial appointments include Associate Editor at the&nbsp;<em>Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places in the Global Economy</em>&nbsp;(Emerald Publishing) and Associate Editor at the&nbsp;<em>International Journal of Business and Globalisation</em>&nbsp;(Inderscience Publishers). Dr. Meghna also has more than fifty Journal publications indexed in Scopus, Web of Science, and ABDC. She is a Ph.D. supervisor and holds three international patents.</p>
<p>This book focuses on the importance of women’s entrepreneurship policy in the entrepreneurial ecosystem. The book’s contributions demonstrate a link between the nature of policy implications, the various theoretical perspectives used, and whether scholars’ policy implications have transformed as the field of women’s entrepreneurship study has advanced. The book looks deeper into the reasons why there seems to be a big gap between formal women’s entrepreneurship legislation and actual business support services. What can be done to close policy and program gaps? What can government policy do to foster an entrepreneur-friendly environment? What level and form of government intervention in the economy should be to attain this goal? These issues have been hotly debated for a long time, and this book seeks answers to these questions. An institutional approach to analysing government policies is encouraged because macro-level regulations, social norms, and culture influence fostering women’s entrepreneurial activities. The book and its contributions draw on gender and institutional theory to recommend policy initiatives and measures to combat the lower entrepreneurship rates among the women population. Researchers and policymakers will benefit significantly from this book since it contains ideas for improving policy measures, the entrepreneurial ecosystem for women, and areas for further research. Women entrepreneurs have different motives and goals than men when starting a business.</p>
Explores contextual embeddedness of women’s entrepreneurial leadership in cognitive, normative, and regulatory framework Investigates link between nature of policy implications in women's entrepreneurship context Fosters the pertinence and significance of women’s entrepreneurship policy in the entrepreneurial ecosystem