Indigenous Aspirations and Rights: The Case for Responsible Business and Management
DOI: 10.9774/gleaf.9781783533244_7
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Indigenous rights capital: The basis for sustainable enterprise creation

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Finally, our research on Indigenous crowdfunding practices contributes on a broader discussion of Indigenous rights and self-determination (Colbourne, 2017a;Corntassel, 2012;Kayseas et al, 2015;Ritsema et al, 2015) by highlighting the need for Indigenous peoples, communities, and organizations to be proactive in developing dynamic Indigenous-centric entrepreneurial strategies. It presents Indigenous crowdfunding practices as an additional tool for empowerment and develops a typology that demonstrates the complexity involved in developing socioeconomic ventures by and for Indigenous peoples.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Finally, our research on Indigenous crowdfunding practices contributes on a broader discussion of Indigenous rights and self-determination (Colbourne, 2017a;Corntassel, 2012;Kayseas et al, 2015;Ritsema et al, 2015) by highlighting the need for Indigenous peoples, communities, and organizations to be proactive in developing dynamic Indigenous-centric entrepreneurial strategies. It presents Indigenous crowdfunding practices as an additional tool for empowerment and develops a typology that demonstrates the complexity involved in developing socioeconomic ventures by and for Indigenous peoples.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Several studies have explored the economic well-being of indigenous peoples globally through case studies that provide practical examples of how indigenous well-being is premised on sustainable self-determination that is, in turn, dependent on a community's evolving model for economic development, its cultural traditions, its relationship to its traditional territories and its spiritual practices. These studies have demonstrated the role of indigenous communities to successfully used entrepreneurship in the pursuit of sustainable development and well-being (Macpherson et al, 2021;Colbourne and Anderson, 2021;Kayseas et al, 2015;Cordoba et al, 2021;Padilla-Mel endez et al, 2021). A study conducted by Peredo et al (2019) about indigenous social innovation and entrepreneurial practices highlighted the following aspects to consider related to their well-being: traditional knowledge and practices; distinct cosmology and culture; and struggles for decolonisation and indigenous resurgence.…”
Section: The Limitations Of the Sustainable Development Goals To Meet...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Entrepreneurship in market economies is evolving in response to changing societal and environmental demands on firms and managers to afford greater credence to nonmarket values of enterprise and economy (Frank et al, 2008). This is reflected in the rise of theoretical developments in social enterprise (De Bruin & Teasdale, 2019), responsible management (Laasch et al, 2020), inclusive economic development (Gutierrez, 2018;Schulze et al, 2021), economies of wellbeing (Dalziel et al, 2018;Diener & Seligman, 2004;Wolfgramm et al, 2019), and sustainable enterprise (Colbourne & Anderson, 2020;Kayseas et al, 2017). In these theoretical developments, fundamental questions of who and what do enterprise serve are challenging scholars and practitioners to reconsider entrepreneurship's values.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%