A descriptive literature review of the continued marginalisation of female entrepreneurs in sub-Saharan Africa Online publication date: Mon, 10-Dec-2018
by Ernest Etim; Chux Gervase Iwu
International Journal of Gender Studies in Developing Societies (IJGSDS), Vol. 3, No. 1, 2019
Abstract: Sustaining entrepreneurship requires the participation of every member of society including women. Although they are actively involved as owners and/or managers of small and or/medium enterprises, female entrepreneurs in Africa, specifically the sub-Saharan region, experience a variety of constraints much more than their male counterparts. We ask the question: why do women remain marginalised in sub-Saharan Africa with respect to optimising entrepreneurial uptakes? This paper was written using the descriptive literature review method. The purpose of adopting the method was to carry out a critical, rigorous and transparent appraisal of previous research, so as to understand why the underrepresentation of women in entrepreneurship exists. Essentially, the economic and social standings of women remain barriers to their inclusion in society as citizens because citizenship has always been built in masculine terms where women are not seen as citizens. Our thesis is that an addition to the list of challenges of entrepreneurship should be 'gender' as being female constitutes a big challenge.
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