2 resultados para cabeçalhos de assuntos
em Instituto Superior de Psicologia Aplicada - Lisboa
Resumo:
No presente número da COeG são mostrados alguns dos trabalhos apresentados na conferência, conduzidos por investigadores cujo traço de união é a expressão em língua portuguesa, e que exploram assuntos a diversos níveis da gestão da inovação e da tecnologia, desde o político ao estratégico, do processual ao operacional. A COeG alia-se, assim, a outras revistas científicas patrocinadoras e/ou apoiantes do evento, como a The R&D Management Journal, e a Creativity and Innovation Management, que apresentam brevemente edições especiais relacionadas com a reunião em Sesimbra.
Resumo:
The labor market in the multicultural society is a major arena where the interrelation of gender and ethnicity is expressed in processes of discrimination, sexism and racism. For women from ethnic minorities, one way to avoid these problems is to work in migrant enterprises. As this may ease tensions related to ethnicity, it does not solve gender-related problems like the subordination of women and the perception of female migrants as ‘just’ daughters, mothers and wives by male co-migrants. Female ethnic minority entrepreneurship may be the way to escape such processes. In the Netherlands, 25% of all ethnic minority entrepreneurs are female. However, little is known about their socio-economic background and the way they perceive their businesses. Moreover, there is a theoretical haphazardness concerning the phenomenon female ethnic minority entrepreneurship. Although recently researchers have opted for an integral theory called the ‘mixed-embeddedness’ approach as to explain ethnic minority entrepreneurship through a combination of personal, sociocultural and structural factors, the role of gender still seems to be underexposed in this theory. Likewise, the literature concerning entrepreneurial networking has hardly interfered with both gender and ethnicity. Therefore, this paper provides a state of affairs concerning the research and literature on ethnic minority entrepreneurship, gender and networks. It argues that a better understanding of female ethnic minority entrepreneurship requires further scientific attention and that a contribution needs to be made to theory development regarding the interrelation of ethnicity and gender in entrepreneurship and in entrepreneurial networks particularly.