2019
DOI: 10.1108/ijge-12-2018-0138
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How do female entrepreneurs in developing countries cope with role conflict?

Abstract: Purpose Female entrepreneurs often face significant conflicts in allocating time and resources to the various roles demanded of them by their communities. This has been identified as a potential obstacle to their performance as entrepreneurs. This paper aims to examine the question: How do women cope with role conflict? Design/methodology/approach The authors tackled the question by conducting a survey that involved 307 female business owners in Ethiopia. The survey result was supported by 20 in-depth interv… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…We have also shown that optimism is significantly and positively related to entrepreneurial intentions, specifically in difficult times. This importance of optimism for the development of entrepreneurial intentions complements previous studies in which entrepreneurs have been considered individuals who remain optimistic and persist even in adverse situations [123,124].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…We have also shown that optimism is significantly and positively related to entrepreneurial intentions, specifically in difficult times. This importance of optimism for the development of entrepreneurial intentions complements previous studies in which entrepreneurs have been considered individuals who remain optimistic and persist even in adverse situations [123,124].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…In developed countries, women's entrepreneurship has received scholarly attention; however, in emerging nations, such attention has been limited (Welsh et al, 2018). Prior studies have addressed the contemporary replacement of offline and online shopping (Dakduk et al, 2017), systematic mobile-device usage (Hossain et al, 2019a(Hossain et al, , 2019b(Hossain et al, , 2019c(Hossain et al, , 2019d, m-shopping behavior (Holmes et al, 2013), m-learning (Hossain et al, 2019a(Hossain et al, , 2019b(Hossain et al, , 2019c(Hossain et al, , 2019d, social networking and entrepreneurship (Hossain, 2019), the acceptance of smartphone-based m-shopping (Hubert et al, 2017), variety-seeking among university students (Hossain et al, 2019a(Hossain et al, , 2019b(Hossain et al, , 2019c(Hossain et al, , 2019d, women and apparel-based entrepreneurship (Hodges et al, 2015), coping with role conflict in entrepreneurial activities (Hundera et al, 2019), navigating institutional complexities (Langevang et al, 2018), the normative context for women's entrepreneurship (Roomi et al, 2018), women entrepreneurs in the Indian informal sector (Williams and Gurtoo, 2011), trajectory movement and entrepreneurial tendency (Hossain et al, 2019a(Hossain et al, , 2019b(Hossain et al, , 2019c(Hossain et al, , 2019d, factors affecting the success of women's entrepreneurship (Cabrera and Mauricio, 2017;Hossain et al, 2020) and entrepreneurial tendency among university students (Gürol and Atsan, 2006). However, specific studies on smartphone-based increased m-shopping behavior and an innovative entrepreneurial tendency among women in emerging Asia are limited.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Apart from challenges related to legitimacy, it is associated with a particular barrier for inclusion, which also are hard to assess, because firms usually are not interested in mechanics -the exact capabilities, cultural specificity of gender differences between employees that led to the expected result [Thomas, Ely, 1996]. Nevertheless, employees with childcare commitments in entrepreneurial job environment often face significant role conflicts regarding allocating time and resources; however, high level of personal resources valuable for high-involvement work system, as optimism, self-efficacy and resilience through their positive effect on adaptability, lead to a preference of entrepreneurial roles over their social roles [Hundera et al, 2019]. Possible interventions here -to redesign traditional workplaces, aiming to balance between employees' work-life needs and workplace effectiveness.…”
Section: Results and Discussion: Barriers For Inclusion And Opportunimentioning
confidence: 99%