Contents:
About Global WEP xviii
1 Introduction to Women’s Entrepreneurship Policy: taking
stock and moving forward 1
Colette Henry, Susan Coleman and Kate V. Lewis
2 Exploring the gender gap in women’s entrepreneurship:
a narrative policy analysis 14
Patricia G. Greene and Candida Brush
3 Strategies to redress entrepreneurship gender gaps in
Canada revisited 40
Barbara J. Orser
4 Entrepreneurship as a losing proposition for women:
gendered outcomes of neo-liberal entrepreneurship policy
in a Nordic welfare state 77
Helene Ahl, Malin Tillmar, Karin Berglund and Katarina
Pettersson
5 Mapping ethnic minority women entrepreneurs’ support
initiatives: experiences from the UK 105
Helen Lawton Smith and Beldina Owalla
6 Institutional work in Czech and US business assistance
programmes and implications for entrepreneurial inclusion 125
Nancy C. Jurik, Alena Křížková, Marie Pospíšilová and
Gray Cavender
7 Barriers to women’s entrepreneurship in Poland and
institutional support 164
Ewa Lisowska and Dariusz Leszczyński
8 Beyond COVID-19: women entrepreneurs and
e-commerce policy in the Asia-Pacific 194
Patrice Braun, Naomi Birdthistle and Antoinette Flynn
9 Analysis of Ghana’s and South Africa’s women
entrepreneurship policies 216
Mavis S. B. Mensah and Evelyn Derera
Index 243
Edited by Colette Henry, Head of Department of Business Studies, Dundalk Institute of Technology (DkIT), Ireland and Griffith University Australia, Susan Coleman, Professor Emerita, University of Hartford, US and Kate V. Lewis, Reader, Newcastle University, UK
‘Well thought-out, illustrative and opportune! This outstanding
collection of chapters positively influences the future of the
women’s entrepreneurship research agenda and outlines new pathways
for entrepreneurship policy formation, enrichment and delivery. A
must-read for policy makers and scholars around the globe.’
*Rosa Nelly Trevinyo-Rodríguez, Trevinyo-Rodríguez & Associates,
México*
‘This compelling book is packed with insightful gems for inclusive
entrepreneurial policy. The wide geographical coverage of the
chapter collection and their varied theoretical lenses –
institutional, narrative and feminist – ensures the value of these
insights. Essential reading for enlightened evidence-based policy
making for the post-COVID-19 pandemic era, that recognizes women’s
entrepreneurship within the broader entrepreneurial ecosystem.’
*Anne de Bruin, University of Auckland, New Zealand*
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