Women entrepreneurs and belonging in entrepreneurial resourcing practice
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Pretoria
Abstract
Women’s entrepreneurship has been lauded as a potential key contributor
towards social and economic development and well researched over the last
three decades. Central to these studies is the acknowledgement of gendered and
racialised patterns in the field and the consequent association of
entrepreneurship with maleness and whiteness. This has resulted in unequal
access to resources for women entrepreneurs and a sense of alienation and nonbelonging.
Furthermore, black women entrepreneurs have been noted to
experience the double-negative of race and gender thus experiencing
disproportional alienation, being severely under resourced and resulting in their
enterprises being smaller and less profitable than their white counterparts.
Entrepreneurial resourcing is key to venture development and success, with
belonging being found to influence resourcing practices. In this study, the
entrepreneurship as practice (EaP) approach was employed to explore the
belonging and resourcing practices of 26 black women entrepreneurs in South
Africa utilising a narrative design, situated in the social constructionist paradigm.
The study provides several contributions. Firstly, it contributes a new conceptual
framework about the practices that black women entrepreneurs within certain
contexts, employ to negotiate belonging and resourcing. Secondly, it extends the
Occupational Perspective of Health theory (OPH) from Psychology, into
entrepreneurship. Thirdly, by employing OPH, the study refines the existing
theories of entrepreneurial belonging by revealing the interdependent nature of
belonging with doing, being and becoming. The study then makes a
methodological contribution by offering a systematic approach for the
examination of practice interrelationships and complex entrepreneurial
experiences. Additionally, it makes an empirical contribution with the unique
dataset of life histories of black women entrepreneurs from across the African
continent. Finally, it offers practical strategic guidelines for navigating, fasttracking
and achieving belonging and resourcing for marginalised entrepreneurs.
Description
Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2025.
Keywords
UCTD, Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Entrepreneurial belonging, Resourcing, Black women entrepreneurs, Entrepreneurship-as-practice, Resourcing-as-practice, Forms of capital, Capital conversion, Intersectionality, Community as resource
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-05: Gender equality
SDG-08: Decent work and economic growth
SDG-09: Industry, innovation and infrastructure
SDG-08: Decent work and economic growth
SDG-09: Industry, innovation and infrastructure
Citation
*
