The Economic Integration of Women Refugee Entrepreneurs in New Zealand

Type of content
Chapters
Publisher's DOI/URI
Thesis discipline
Degree name
Publisher
Routledge
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Language
Date
2021
Authors
Ranabahu, N.
de Vries HP
Basharati Z
Abstract

Forcible displacement and asylum-seeking experiences shape refugee women’s social and economic integration into host communities. Applying a mixed-embeddedness theoretical frame, this chapter studies how women refugees’ asylum-seeking journey and resettlement experience shaped their business start-up and development in the host country. We chronicled four women refugee entrepreneurs in New Zealand to illustrate the social, cultural, economic and institutional factors that affect their everyday businesses experiences. These experiences are embedded in multiple contextual layers related to home country, transitional journey and host country events. Business activities require both adult and young women, who arrived in New Zealand as refugees, to reconcile their host and home country identities and asylum-seeking journey. These findings advance the mixed-embeddedness narrative on refugee women in business.

Description
Citation
Ranabahu N,de Vries HP,Basharati Z (2021). The Economic Integration of Women Refugee Entrepreneurs in New Zealand. In McAdam M, Cunningham JA (Ed.), Women and Global Entrepreneurship: Contextualising Everyday Experiences (In Print).Routledge.
Keywords
refugee women, entrepreneur, New Zealand, embeddedness, economic integration
Ngā upoko tukutuku/Māori subject headings
ANZSRC fields of research
Fields of Research::35 - Commerce, management, tourism and services::3507 - Strategy, management and organisational behaviour::350704 - Entrepreneurship
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All rights reserved unless otherwise stated