2006
DOI: 10.1002/jid.1279
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Women entrepreneurs in the Gambia: challenges and opportunities

Abstract: This article reviews the literature on women entrepreneurs in developing countries and presents evidence from a case study undertaken during 2001 and 2002 in Gambia examining the challenges facing women entrepreneurs in the small enterprise sector. The article attempt to discuss the gendered nature of the barriers to survival and growth, particularly the low productivity of sectors in which women entrepreneurs operate, the difficulty in accessing capital for expansion and the need to reconcile business with do… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…Although the number of women owned small businesses has increased over the years, a significant number of these business ventures remain in traditional areas such as the retail and service industry sectors (Della-Giusta and Phillips, 2006;Smith-Hunter and Boyd, 2004). In agreement with literature, the empirical findings of the study reveal that 92% of the businesses operated by women were in the retail and service industry.…”
Section: The Gendered Marketing Of Entrepreneurial Start-up Capitalsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…Although the number of women owned small businesses has increased over the years, a significant number of these business ventures remain in traditional areas such as the retail and service industry sectors (Della-Giusta and Phillips, 2006;Smith-Hunter and Boyd, 2004). In agreement with literature, the empirical findings of the study reveal that 92% of the businesses operated by women were in the retail and service industry.…”
Section: The Gendered Marketing Of Entrepreneurial Start-up Capitalsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…Access to finance is a major constraint faced by entrepreneurs in many nations regardless of gender (Della‐Giusta & Phillips, ; Hisrich & Ozturk, ; Ndemo & Maina, ). However, this problem is more severe in emerging nations (Hisrich & Ozturk, ).…”
Section: Research On Female Entrepreneurshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These market imperfections result in increased costs, and have a negative impact on the growth opportunities of firms. Lack of trust and unwillingness to share information exacerbate the challenges facing enterprises by hindering information and knowledge transfers that are critical for the growth and sustainability of small firms (Phillips and Della-Guista, 2006).…”
Section: Firm Performance and Growthmentioning
confidence: 99%