支持发展中国家女企业家的政策:以坦桑尼亚为例

Dina Nziku, C. Henry
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引用次数: 9

摘要

目的:虽然妇女创业问题在学术上的吸引力继续增加,但政策方面的学术注意有限,特别是在发展中国家。为了解决这一学术差距,本文旨在批判性地探讨坦桑尼亚妇女创业政策。研究的问题是:在坦桑尼亚,鼓励和支持创业的政策是如何设计的?在坦桑尼亚的背景下,这些政策如何(重新)设计,使它们与女性企业家更相关?作者对现有学术的贡献是:提请注意坦桑尼亚妇女创业的特殊背景;确定当前创业政策中固有的性别偏见;为政策制定者提供一些建议,并确定该领域未来值得关注的研究领域。设计/方法/方法本研究以全球妇女企业政策项目为基础。作者运用一种适应性阅读指南技术来分析和批判坦桑尼亚的相关创业政策文件。该阅读指南审查了所分析文件的类别和类型、主要主题、内容、语言和意象,以及所提供的主要政策建议及其与坦桑尼亚和更广泛的撒哈拉以南非洲地区妇女创业的相关性。完成的阅读指南模板随后被编码并整理成一个excel电子表格。研究结果在规范、规范和文化认知框架内进行讨论和批评。研究结果该研究为坦桑尼亚女性创业的独特背景提供了丰富而有价值的见解,为撒哈拉以南非洲特定地区如何支持女性创业提供了新的视角。调查结果显示,虽然目前的政策承认妇女在其社区中发挥重要作用,特别是在她们对劳动的贡献方面,但它更多地面向中小型企业的发展,而不是企业家精神;尽管企业家精神被确定为应对可持续发展挑战(特别是失业和贫穷)和扩大社会处境不利群体,特别是妇女的机会的手段。现有政策基本上是“情境中立”的,因此相对无效;缺乏对性别问题的关注,也没有考虑到坦桑尼亚妇女企业家必须在其中经营的具体情况。这组作者认为,旨在支持女性创业的政策应该在她们特定的地理和文化背景下正规化和具体化。“体制支柱”框架使我们能够确定可以加强妇女创业政策背景化的领域。实际意义该研究表明,为使支持妇女创业的政策有效,需要将其正规化,并使之适应其特定的地理和文化环境。确定了可能实现这一目标的一些领域。最后提出了今后研究的方向。原创性/价值本文的价值在于其对坦桑尼亚的关注,以及从性别和制度角度对现有政策的批评。它还增进了对坦桑尼亚独特的创业环境的理解。
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Policies for supporting women entrepreneurs in developing countries: the case of Tanzania
PurposeWhile the topic of women's entrepreneurship continues to grow in academic appeal, the policy aspect is one that has received limited scholarly attention, especially in the context of developing countries. To address this gap in scholarship, the purpose of this paper aims to critically explore women's entrepreneurship policy in Tanzania. The research question asks: How are policies designed to encourage and support entrepreneurship in Tanzania gendered, and how might such policies be (re)designed so that they are more relevant to women entrepreneurs in the Tanzanian context? The authors contribute to extant scholarship by: drawing attention to the particular context for women's entrepreneurship in Tanzania; identifying gender biases inherent in current entrepreneurship policies; offering some recommendations for policymakers and identifying areas worthy of future research attention in this area.Design/methodology/approachThe study builds on the Global Women's Enterprise Policy project. The authors apply an adapted reading guide technique to analyse and critique relevant entrepreneurship policy documents in Tanzania. The reading guide examines the category and type of document being analysed, key themes, content, language and imagery, as well as the key policy recommendations being offered and their relevance to women's entrepreneurship in Tanzania and the wider sub-Saharan African region. Completed reading guide templates are then coded and collated into an excel spreadsheet. Findings are discussed and critiqued within a regulative, normative and cultural-cognitive framework.FindingsThe study provides rich and valuable insights into the unique context for women's entrepreneurship in Tanzania, shedding new light on how women's entrepreneurship is supported in a particular region of sub-Saharan Africa. Findings reveal that while current policy acknowledges the important role women play in their communities, especially in terms of their contribution to labour, it is geared more towards small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) development than entrepreneurship; this is despite the fact that entrepreneurship is identified as a means to address sustainable development challenges (notably unemployment and poverty) and expand opportunities for socially disadvantaged groups, especially women. Existing policy is essentially “context neutral” and hence relatively ineffective; the gender focus is lacking and there is a failure to take account of the specific context in which Tanzanian women entrepreneurs have to operate. The authors argue for policies designed to support women's entrepreneurship to be formalised and contextualised in their specific geographical and cultural setting. The “institutional pillars” framework allows us to identify areas where contextualisation of women's entrepreneurship policies could be enhanced.Practical implicationsThe study implies that, to be effective, policies designed to support women's entrepreneurship need to be formalised and contextualised to their specific geographical and cultural setting. Some areas where this might be achieved are identified. Avenues for future research in this area are also suggested.Originality/valueThe value of the paper lies in its focus on Tanzania, and its critique of existing policies from a gender and institutional perspective. It also enhances understanding of the unique context in Tanzania for entrepreneurship.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
15.80%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Institutions – especially public policies – are a significant determinant of economic outcomes; entrepreneurship and enterprise development are often the channel by which public policies affect economic outcomes, and by which outcomes feed back to the policy process. The Journal of Entrepreneurship & Public Policy (JEPP) was created to encourage and disseminate quality research about these vital relationships. The ultimate aim is to improve the quality of the political discourse about entrepreneurship and development policies. JEPP publishes two issues per year and welcomes: Empirically oriented academic papers and accepts a wide variety of empirical evidence. Generally, the journal considers any analysis based on real-world circumstances and conditions that can change behaviour, legislation, or outcomes, Conceptual or theoretical papers that indicate a direction for future research, or otherwise advance the field of study, A limited number of carefully and accurately executed replication studies, Book reviews. In general, JEPP seeks high-quality articles that say something interesting about the relationships among public policy and entrepreneurship, entrepreneurship and economic development, or all three areas. Scope/Coverage: Entrepreneurship, Public policy, Public policies and behaviour of economic agents, Interjurisdictional differentials and their effects, Law and entrepreneurship, New firms; startups, Microeconomic analyses of economic development, Development planning and policy, Innovation and invention: processes and incentives, Regional economic activity: growth, development, and changes, Regional development policy.
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