Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2542527593> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 73 of
73
with 100 items per page.
- W2542527593 abstract "Present-day development theory and practice highlight the potential of micro-entrepreneurship for poverty reduction in least developed countries. Fostered by the seminal writings of microfinance founder Muhammad Yunus and the bottom-of-the-pyramid propagator Krishnarao Prahalad, the new approach is marked by a stress on participation and sustainability, and the new, market-based development models. With the growing popularity of the new approach there has been an increased demand for research on the efficacy and impact of innovations. What has scarcely been addressed, however, is the legitimacy of the new paradigm within its contexts of application. Since engagement and participation have been made the focal point of the new approach, my research investigates how the innovative, mostly market-based models have been received by the local populations on the ground. This doctoral dissertation is looking up-close at the rural populations of Burundi, describing and explaining their perceptions, behaviors and actions in response to the market-based development innovations: microfinance, rural entrepreneurship and community social enterprise. Do the concepts of entrepreneurship, community engagement and participation find a fertile ground among the poorest rural dwellers of sub-Saharan Africa? Can subsistence farmers be entrepreneurs? How to create social value in the context of extreme resource scarcity? It is investigating these and other questions that guided the subsequent stages of my work. I based my dissertation on extensive field research, conducted periodically over the period of four years in the remote areas of rural Burundi.In the first chapter, I question the applicability of entrepreneurship-based interventions to the socio-cultural context of rural Burundi. Basing my quantitative analysis on a unique cross-section dataset from Burundi of over 900 households, I look into the entrepreneurial livelihood strategies at the near-subsistence level: diversifying crops, processing food for sale, supplementary wage work and non-agricultural employment. I find that the farmers living closer to the subsistence level are indeed less likely to pursue innovative entrepreneurial opportunities, unable to break the poverty cycle and move beyond subsistence agriculture. The paper contributes to the ongoing debate on by analyzing its drivers and inhibitors in the context of a subsistence economy. It questions the idea of alleviating rural poverty through the external promotion of entrepreneurship as it constitutes ‘a denial of the poor’s capacity for agency to bring about social change by themselves on their own terms’.Drawing on these findings, the second chapter focusses on the role of local communities as shareholders of projects. The aim of this paper is to investigate the ways in which the agrarian communities in rural Burundi accommodate the model of a community social enterprise. The project understudy, implemented by the UNICEF Burundi Innovation Lab, builds upon the provision of green energy generators to the village child protection committees in the energy-deficient rural regions of the country. The electricity-producing machines are also a new income source for the groups, transforming them into economically viable community enterprises. Since the revenue earned is to directly support the village orphans’ fund, the communities in question engage in a true post-development venture: they gradually assume the role of the development-provisioning organizations.The third chapter of this work focusses on the complex interaction between the microfinance providers and the population of its clients and potential clients: the rural poor. It draws on the existing research on positive deviance among African communities and explores the social entrepreneurial potential of the rule-breaking practices of microfinance programs’ beneficiaries. Using the storyboard methodology, I examine the strategies employed by the poor in Burundi to bypass institutional rules. My results suggest that transgressive practices and nonconformity of development beneficiaries can indeed be seen as innovative, entrepreneurial initiatives to reform the microfinance system from within, postulating a more participatory mode of MFIs’ organizational governance. The three empirical chapters provide concrete examples illustrating the contested nature of the development process. In the last, theoretical, chapter, I examine how the different conceptualizations of social entrepreneurship have been shaped by the disparate socio-political realities in the North and in the South. I then analyze how the process of constructing academic representation has been influenced by the prevalent public discourses.Since doubling or tripling of the external development finance has not sufficed to bring about systemic change, the assumption that technology, managerial efficacy and the leveraging power of financial markets could be applied to solving the problem of persisting global poverty has a lot of appeal. At the same time, my findings point to the fact that if the ultimate objective of development is broadly defined value creation, the definition of what constitutes value should be negotiated among all the stakeholders. The dissertation makes an important contribution to the understanding of participation, entrepreneurship and community engagement in the context of development studies.I strongly believe that development organizations must have a quality understanding of the social and cultural characteristics of the need or problem they are targeting in order to make productive decisions about the application and scaling of interventions. I very much hope that my work can provide some guidance for their work on the ground." @default.
- W2542527593 created "2016-11-04" @default.
- W2542527593 creator A5001364911 @default.
- W2542527593 date "2016-01-04" @default.
- W2542527593 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W2542527593 title "Micro-entrepreneurs in Rural Burundi: Innovation and Contestation at the Bottom of the Pyramid" @default.
- W2542527593 hasPublicationYear "2016" @default.
- W2542527593 type Work @default.
- W2542527593 sameAs 2542527593 @default.
- W2542527593 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2542527593 crossrefType "posted-content" @default.
- W2542527593 hasAuthorship W2542527593A5001364911 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C109747225 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C162324750 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C175444787 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C18903297 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C2779082914 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C2779343474 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C2779575352 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C28129649 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C50522688 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C66204764 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C68062652 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C84309077 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C109747225 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C162324750 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C166957645 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C175444787 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C17744445 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C18903297 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C199539241 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C205649164 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C2779082914 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C2779343474 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C2779575352 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C28129649 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C50522688 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C66204764 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C68062652 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C84309077 @default.
- W2542527593 hasConceptScore W2542527593C86803240 @default.
- W2542527593 hasLocation W25425275931 @default.
- W2542527593 hasOpenAccess W2542527593 @default.
- W2542527593 hasPrimaryLocation W25425275931 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W1008085388 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W1593621527 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W1775337083 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W1964364144 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W2049522247 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W2162274566 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W2185859099 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W2276309253 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W2479371651 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W2568042255 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W2624542728 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W280655738 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W2908947402 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W2964359109 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W3026918761 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W3141548575 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W3194410841 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W56561739 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W2926124342 @default.
- W2542527593 hasRelatedWork W3000557018 @default.
- W2542527593 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2542527593 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2542527593 magId "2542527593" @default.
- W2542527593 workType "article" @default.