Negotiating identities: the intersectional identity work of refugee women entrepreneursTools Adeeko, Nkechi Joanne (2021) Negotiating identities: the intersectional identity work of refugee women entrepreneurs. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractThis study explores the complex identity work undertaken by women refugee entrepreneurs in the UK. Whilst popular discourse proposes self-employment as an accessible means to integration and autonomy for marginalised people, many refugees engage in entrepreneurial activities to avoid discrimination and disadvantage in the labour market. Drawing on translocational intersectionality to examine the experiences of this under-researched group of women, this thesis examines how the intersection of gender, ethnicity/race, class and other identity markers influence efforts to move from a stigmatised refugee identity to an entrepreneurial identity. In considering the multi-dimensional and dynamic agentic dialogue negotiated with institutional and socio-cultural structures, this study contributes to contextualised scholarship on identity and entrepreneurship. The thesis proposes the following research question: How does engagement in entrepreneurial activities influence the identity construction of refugee women?
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