“…In particular, entrepreneurial belonging for women is a core activity requiring acceptance and legitimacy as an individual through developing agency within shifting power asymmetries (Stead, 2017). While studies of gender and entrepreneurship have explored the ways in which women struggle to belong – fit in – as entrepreneurs in different context (Barragan et al , 2018; Essers et al , 2020; Lewis, 2013; Marlow and McAdam, 2012), there is a need to further understand the “gendered dynamics of belonging,” and specifically, the way in which women “work to position and reposition themselves as entrepreneurs over some time” (Stead, 2017, p. 74). Moreover, Stead (2017, p. 69) highlights the complexity and varying nature of belonging by stating “how women entrepreneurs often dance between different ways of performing belonging to realize belonging in a material sense (joining a business) and in an affective sense (being and feeling accepted as an entrepreneur).” This performative process seems to be connected to identity and legitimation (De Clerq and Voronov, 2009; Pailot et al , 2017; Swail and Marlow, 2018).…”