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Contextualising Female Entrepreneurship and Financial Inclusion in Nigeria

Chioma Onoshakpor (Aberdeen Business School, Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK)
James Cunningham (Aberdeen Business School, Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK)
Elizabeth Gammie (Aberdeen Business School, Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, UK)

Contextualising African Studies: Challenges and the Way Forward

ISBN: 978-1-80455-339-8, eISBN: 978-1-80455-338-1

Publication date: 12 December 2023

Abstract

Our aim is to better understand access to finance and financial inclusion and how this impacts the development of female-run enterprises in Nigeria. In such a way, we can better understand the gendered context of entrepreneurship and the implications for business growth. This chapter adopts an interpretivist paradigm to explore the social reality within which entrepreneurship is enacted. Qualitative data are interpreted from semi-structured interviews of 10 Nigerian entrepreneurs, five males and five females. Findings reveal that, though structural support may be apparent, the entrepreneurial process of financing a business is characterised, in part, by social expectations of gender. It is through this social view of entrepreneurship that we provide an understanding of what it is to be entrepreneurial in practice. This chapter makes recommendations that in practice while financial institutions and policy makers may assume a ‘one size fits all’ approach to financial inclusion through different programmes currently available for entrepreneurs by the various governmental and non-governmental institutions in Nigeria, the context of gender has implications for the nature of business activity, particularly in a society characterised by patriarchy. This study also makes practical contributions for research and for practice.

Keywords

Citation

Onoshakpor, C., Cunningham, J. and Gammie, E. (2023), "Contextualising Female Entrepreneurship and Financial Inclusion in Nigeria", Harrison, C. and Omeihe, K.O. (Ed.) Contextualising African Studies: Challenges and the Way Forward (New Frontiers in African Business and Society), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 13-36. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80455-338-120231002

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Chioma Onoshakpor, James Cunningham and Elizabeth Gammie