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Frontmatter

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© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. De Gruyter Handbooks in Business, Economics and Finance V
  3. Contents VII
  4. List of Contributors XI
  5. Preface XXI
  6. Part 1: Understanding the Poverty and Entrepreneurship Interface
  7. 1 Toward a New Paradigm for Poverty Entrepreneurship 1
  8. 2 The Challenges of Poverty When Starting a Business 25
  9. 3 Opportunity Recognition Through the Lens of Poverty 43
  10. 4 Theoretical Frameworks for Research on Poverty and Entrepreneurship: A Review and Agenda for Future Research 61
  11. Part 2: Contextual Variables Affecting Poverty and Entrepreneurship
  12. 5 The Informal Economy and Poverty in Developing and Emerging Economies: Outlining a Process of Semi-formalization to Support Development 111
  13. 6 Understanding Entrepreneurship and the Informal Sector 135
  14. 7 Business Formalization, Government Program Participation, and Civic Engagement: Evidence from West Java, Indonesia 157
  15. 8 Entrepreneurship and Poverty: A Comparative Institutional Perspective 183
  16. 9 Ecosystems and the Poverty Entrepreneur 207
  17. 10 It Takes a Village: Towards Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Dedicated to the Poor 229
  18. 11 Child Entrepreneurs in Bangladesh: The Role of the Poor Family in Initiating Businesses 253
  19. 12 From Surviving to Thriving: The Multiplier Effect of Women’s Entrepreneurship in Emerging Markets 269
  20. 13 The Impact of Poverty, Disadvantages, and Entrepreneurship Among Refugee Women Entrepreneurs in Glasgow- Scotland 295
  21. 14 Beyond the Narrative: Exploring the Myths of Race, Poverty, and Entrepreneurship 331
  22. Part 3: Mechanisms to Facilitate Sustainable Entrepreneurship
  23. 15 The Psychology of Poverty-Based Entrepreneurs: Faith-Community Involvement, Status Hierarchies, and Venture Flourishing 357
  24. 16 Faith and Entrepreneurial Decision- Making: Case Experiences with People in Poverty Circumstances 381
  25. 17 Poor Entrepreneurs’ Strategies to Overcome Resource Constraints 403
  26. 18 Entrepreneurial Hustle and the Poverty Entrepreneur: Uncovering Alternative Means to Achieve Success 429
  27. 19 Microfinance for Poverty Entrepreneurs: Addressing Gender-Based Violence for Business Success 445
  28. 20 Alternative Funding Mechanisms for Low-Income Entrepreneurs in Sub-Saharan Africa 465
  29. 21 Microfranchising and the Poor 493
  30. 22 Patterns, Process, and Socioeconomic Impacts of Smallholders’ Agro-machinery- Based Entrepreneurship in Bangladesh 513
  31. 23 Marketing Practices and the Entrepreneurial Success of Women in Côte d’Ivoire: The Role of Cultural Systems 533
  32. 24 The Cooperative Enterprise and Poverty Reduction in Africa 553
  33. 25 Approaches to Mentoring When Supporting Poverty Entrepreneurs 577
  34. Part 4: Priorities for Advancing the Poverty and Entrepreneurship Interface
  35. 26 Critical Perspectives on Research Priorities at the Poverty and Entrepreneurship Interface 607
  36. 27 Fostering Poverty Entrepreneurship: A Review of Key Policy Needs and Approaches in the United States 619
  37. 28 Overcoming Adversity: Priorities of Disadvantaged Entrepreneurs Participating in a Holistic Community Intervention Program 643
  38. 29 Priorities When Attempting to Scale a Poverty Intervention Program 667
  39. List of Figures 691
  40. List of Tables 693
  41. About the Editors 695
  42. Index 697
Heruntergeladen am 9.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111215013-fm/html
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