Bibframe Work
Part 1: Performance, success and value in entrepreneurship: a women's perspective. Redefining success beyond economic growth and wealth generation: the case of Ethiopia / Atsede T. Hailemariam and Brigitte Kroon
Value creation through women's entrepreneurship / Shandana Sheiikh, Shumaila Yousafzai, Federica Sist, Aybeniz Akdeniz AR and Saadat Saeed
Stepping into power: women leaders and their journey of self-redefinition / Milka Milliance
Part 2: Challenging the underperformance hypothesis and acknowledging the constrained performance of women entrepreneurs. Hitting the tip: is there a glass ceiling for high-growth women entrepreneurs? / Ruta Aidis
Indigenous entrepreneurship: Maori female entrepreneurs in the tourism industry and constraints to their success / Alina Zapalska and Dallas Brozik
Women entrepreneurs in South Africa: maintaining a balance between culture, personal life, and business / Bridget Irene
HO w vague entrepreneurial identities of Swedish women entrepreneurs are performed by government financiers / Aija Voitkane, Jeaneth Johansson, Malin Malmstrom and Joakim Wincent
Socially constructed masculine domination: officials' perception of female entrepreneurs in Kerala, India / Roshni Narendran
Part 3: Overcoming constrained performance: facilitating women entrepreneurs. Exploring alternative gendered social structures within entrepreneurship education: notes from a women's -only enterprise programme in the United Kingdom / Monique Boddington and Shima Barakat
Bridging the entrepreneurial gender gap through social protection among women small-scale traders in Kenya / Anne Kamau, Paul Kamau, Daniel Muia, Harun Baiya and Jane Ndung'u
Challenges to the formalization of Palestinian female-owned home-based businesses / Grace Khoury, Wojdan Farraj and Suhail Sultan
The influence of gender on social orientation and family-friendly policies in community-based enterprises in Brazil / Luisa Delgado-Marquez, Rachida Justo and Julio O. De Castro
Part 4: Moving forward. Gender and business performance: the role of entrepreneurial segregation / Natalie Sappleton
Still bringing up the rear: why women will always be 'Other' in entrepreneurship's masculine instrumental discourse / Joan Lockyer, Cherisse Hoyte and Sunita Dewitt.
Generation Process: DLC marc2bibframe2 v2.5.0
Status: changed
Encoding Level: full
Description Conventions: ISBD: International standard bibliographic descriptionResource description and access
Identified By: bf:Local, 20113754
Change Date: 2023-05-24T08:26:27
Creation Date: 2017-10-31
Description Language: English
Description Modifier: United States, Library of Congress
Description Authentication: LC Copy Cataloging
Assigner: YDX