PRACTITIONER SECTION Women's International Centre for Economic Development (WICED)

被引:6
|
作者
O'Carroll, Maggie [1 ]
Millne, Helen [1 ]
机构
[1] Womens Int Ctr Econ Dev, Liverpool, Merseyside, England
关键词
Education and training; Feminism; Women; Entrepreneurialism; United Kingdom;
D O I
10.1108/17566261011051035
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Purpose - The gender gap in enterprise has been part of an ongoing debate on economic development for over 20 years. In an attempt to tackle this deficit Train 2000, the UK's largest dedicated women's enterprise support organisation supported by its partners Liverpool City Council, Liverpool Vision, and an international panel of leading experts are developing the Women's International Centre for Economic Development (WICED). WICED will support the development of the female enterprise research base, the design and provision of female targeted business start-up and development programmes and business incubation. The purpose of this paper is to describe the work of WICED. Design/methodology/approach - Rigorous research was conducted in order to identify market need and opportunity for WICED in meeting the needs of would be and established women entrepreneurs. Primary and secondary sources of data have been collected utilising a combination of desk, semi-structured interviews, focus groups and questionnaires gathering both qualitative and quantitative information to build a comprehensive picture. The research framework included; independent research review of women's enterprise; women entrepreneurs service user evaluation; study visits - UK, EU and the USA; literature review on legislation, policy, practice and academic research; academic and practitioner expert panel. Findings - The research findings demonstrate that there is potential to transform the rates of self-employment, business ownership and economic participation among women in Liverpool, Merseyside and the UK through the adoption of fit for purpose policies and initiatives to address existing challenges. The research data critically acknowledges that success in terms of increased levels and productivity of female entrepreneurship will not be achieved by "more of the same" in the way of encouragement, endorsement, development or support of the agenda and points to the US approach in developing new ways of harnessing this untapped economic opportunity. Research limitations/implications - The research process highlighted that despite women being one the fastest growing populations of entrepreneurs they remain vastly understudied and that there was a clear lack of cumulative knowledge to adequately build explanatory theories. This lack of a comprehensive picture within the existing body of research limits WICED's understanding of the support needs of female entrepreneurs. However, it also provides WICED with an opportunity to act and conduit between researchers, female entrepreneurs and business support advice, training and incubation practitioners to begin to address the research deficit. Practical implications - The evidence base indicates that both the design and implementation of business support services need to take account of gender. It is acknowledged that policy initiatives that do not recognise that specific requirements of aspiring and developing female entrepreneurs will have limited impact on the level of start-up business or their growth trajectories. The WICED model reflects a transformation approach where a gender aware framework is proposed to support more nuanced research in the field, business support and business incubation. Originality/value - The proposed WICED framework represents a departure from traditional transactional offerings as it will provide demand-led gendered entrepreneurial services as opposed to policy and service provider supply based models.
引用
收藏
页码:197 / 204
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The Fourth International Congress of Women in the Centenary of Bolivar's death, Bogota 1930
    Parra, Cristina Sanchez
    TRASHUMANTE-REVISTA AMERICANA DE HISTORIA SOCIAL, 2023, (22): : 102 - 126
  • [22] Fertility, economic development, and suicides among women in India
    Singh, Parvati
    Das, Abhery
    William, Jenesca
    Bruckner, Tim
    SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2021, 56 (10) : 1751 - 1759
  • [23] Fertility, economic development, and suicides among women in India
    Parvati Singh
    Abhery Das
    Jenesca William
    Tim Bruckner
    Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 2021, 56 : 1751 - 1759
  • [24] WOMEN EMPOWERMENT AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN IMO STATE, NIGERIA
    Uchenna, Ohazurike Eudora
    ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT (ESD), 2016, : 235 - 241
  • [25] The battle for centre stage: Women's football in South Africa
    Engh, Mari Haugaa
    AGENDA-EMPOWERING WOMEN FOR GENDER EQUITY, 2010, 24 (85): : 11 - 20
  • [26] Theorizing the history of women's international thinking at the 'end of international theory'
    Getachew, Adom
    Bell, Duncan
    Enloe, Cynthia
    Thakur, Vineet
    INTERNATIONAL THEORY, 2022, 14 (03) : 394 - 418
  • [27] Unlocking women's sustainability leadership potential: Perceptions of contributions and challenges for women in sustainable development
    Shinbrot, Xoco A.
    Wilkins, Kate
    Gretzel, Ulrike
    Bowser, Gillian
    WORLD DEVELOPMENT, 2019, 119 : 120 - 132
  • [28] A qualitative study of influences on older women’s practitioner choices for back pain care
    Emma R Kirby
    Alex F Broom
    Jon Adams
    David W Sibbritt
    Kathryn M Refshauge
    BMC Health Services Research, 14
  • [29] Virginia Penny's Economic Horizons: Fact and Futurity in Nineteenth- Century Women's Encyclopedic Writing
    Nolan, Rachel Elin
    J19-THE JOURNAL OF NINETEENTH-CENTURY AMERICANISTS, 2023, 11 (02) : 385 - 410
  • [30] A qualitative study of influences on older women's practitioner choices for back pain care
    Kirby, Emma R.
    Broom, Alex F.
    Adams, Jon
    Sibbritt, David W.
    Refshauge, Kathryn M.
    BMC HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2014, 14