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Search term: Minorities

YearTitle / CitationDocument typeLinks / Downloads
2026

2026:  

Power Relations and Outsider Entrepreneurship: Facets of Marginalisation Tendencies Toward Migrant Entrepreneurs

Citation:  

David, A., Terstriep, J. & Zaghow, L. (2026): Power Relations and Outsider Entrepreneurship: Facets of Marginalisation Tendencies Toward Migrant Entrepreneurs. Journal of Organizational Change Management, 1–28. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOCM-10-2024-0668

Abstract / Keywords

Purpose - Power relations within entrepreneurial ecosystems (EEs) are crucial for fostering cooperation among entrepreneurs and ecosystem actors and driving local development and economic advancement. This study examines the social position and marginality of migrant entrepreneurs, a significant yet often overlooked group in traditional entrepreneurship discourse. It explores how power relations and differences manifest in migrant entrepreneurs' founding processes and how they address emerging challenges.

Design/methodology/approach - This qualitative case study uses field and practice angles on power theory to explore the marginalisation of migrant entrepreneursin a German Ruhr Area city with a history of immigration. Pairing deductive and inductive principles, the analysis of 23 in-depth interviews explores the many faces of power for migrant entrepreneurs and how they are dealt with.

Findings – The study identifies three key areas – knowledge, language competence and network affiliation – that shape power relations for marginalised entrepreneurs and influence their perceptions, behaviours and outcomes. Addressing these areas is crucial for creating more equitable and sustainable EEs. Despite structural disadvantages, migrant entrepreneurs use their agency to bridge divides and balance power differences
within EEs.

Originality/value – This research develops a power- and hierarchy-informed lensfor entrepreneurship and EEs, drawing on existing powertheoriesfrom othersocialscience disciplines.It highlightsthe significance ofstudying “socio-cultural outsiders” in entrepreneurship and reveals how friction, imbalance and dysfunctionality arise within EEs as inherently social and stratified contexts and how minoritised entrepreneurs cope.

Migrant entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurial ecosystems, Power relations, Structural disadvantage, Outsider entrepreneurship, Minorities, SME

Document type:  

Journal article

Links / Downloads: