ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of Entrepreneurship in Developing Economies is a landmark volume that offers a uniquely comprehensive overview of entrepreneurship in developing countries. Addressing the multi-faceted nature of entrepreneurship, chapters explore a vast range of subject areas including education, economic policy, gender and the prevalence and nature of informal sector entrepreneurship.

In order to understand the process of new venture creation in developing economies, what it means to be engaged in entrepreneurship in a developing world context must be addressed. This handbook does so by exploring the difficulties, risks and rewards associated with being an entrepreneur, and evaluates the impacts of the environment, relationships, performance and policy dynamics on small and entrepreneurial firms in developing economies.

The handbook brings together a unique collection of over forty international researchers who are all actively engaged in studying entrepreneurship in a developing world context. The chapters offer concise but detailed perspectives and explanations on key aspects of the subject across a diverse array of developing economies, spanning Africa, Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe. In doing so, the chapters highlight the heterogeneity of entrepreneurship in developed economies, and contribute to the on-going policy discourses for managing and promoting entrepreneurial growth in the developing world.

The book will be of great interest to scholars, students and policymakers in the areas of development economics, business and management, public policy and development studies.

part |131 pages

Institutional environment of entrepreneurship

chapter |16 pages

Regulative environment and entrepreneurial activity

Insights from Sub-Saharan Africa

chapter |18 pages

Economic aspects of entrepreneurship

The case of Peru

chapter |12 pages

Developing an entrepreneurship climate in Indonesia

A case study of batik as a cultural heritage

part |111 pages

Entrepreneurs' motivations

chapter |15 pages

Being an entrepreneur of the vicenarian and tricenarian generation

The case of Turkish entrepreneurs, 2006–2012 1

chapter |12 pages

Factors enterprises perceive to influence their success

A case study of agribusiness in Laos

chapter |14 pages

Types of small-scale entrepreneurship

Some lessons from Bulgaria

chapter |9 pages

Social entrepreneurship and fashion innovation in Brazil

A case study of Crafty Women (Mulheres Arteiras) and Rede Asta

part |111 pages

Informal sector entrepreneurship

chapter |13 pages

Entrepreneurship at the base of the Pyramid

The case of Nicaragua

chapter |21 pages

Determinants of participation in the informal sector in Sri Lanka

Evidence from a recently conducted special survey