2,330
Views
3
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Article

Unruly entrepreneurs – investigating value creation by microfinance clients in rural Burundi

, &

References

  • Aidis, R., & van Praag, M. (2007). Illegal entrepreneurship experience: Does it make a difference for business performance and motivation? Journal of Business Venturing, 22, 283–310.
  • Allovio, S. (1997). Burundi identità, etniee potere nella storia di un antico regno. Torino: Il Segnalibro.
  • Amoako, I. O., & Lyons, F. (2013). ‘We don’t deal with courts’: Cooperation and alternative institutions shaping exporting relationships of small and medium-sized enterprises in Ghana. International Small Business Journal, 32(2), 117–139.
  • Anderson, A. R., & Smith, R. (2007). The moral space in entrepreneurship: An exploration of ethical imperatives and the moral legitimacy of being enterprising. Entrepreneurship and Regional Development, 19(6), 479–497.
  • Attanasio, O., Augsburg, B., De Haas, R., Fitzsimons, E., & Harmgart, H. (2015). The impacts of microfinance: Evidence from joint-liability lending in Mongolia. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 7(1), 90–122.
  • Baker, T., & Nelson, R. E. (2005). Creating something from nothing: Resource construction through entrepreneurial bricolage. Administrative Science Quarterly, 50(3), 329–366.
  • Banerjee, A., & Duflo, E. (2006). The economic lives of the poor. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 21(1), 141–168.
  • Battilana, J., & Dorado, S. (2010). Building sustainable hybrid organizations: The case of commercial microfinance organizations. Academy of Management Journal, 53(6), 1419–1440.
  • Bernard, T., De Janvry, A., & Sadoulet, E. (2010). When does community conservatism constrain village organizations? Economic Development and Cultural Change, 58(4), 609–641.
  • Berner, E., Gomez, G., & Knorringa, P. (2012). Helping a large number of people become a little less poor: The logic of survival entrepreneurs. European Journal of Development Research, 24(3), 382–396.
  • Bornstein, D. (1998b). Changing the world on a shoestring. Atlantic Monthly, 281(1), 34–39.
  • Brenkert, D. P. (2009). Innovation, rule breaking and the ethics of entrepreneurship. Journal of Business Venturing, 24, 448‐464.
  • Bruton, G. D., Khavul, S., & Chavez, H. (2011). Microfinance in emerging economies: Building a new line of inquiry from the ground up. Journal of International Business Studies, 42(5), 718–739.
  • Bruyat, C., & Julien, P.-A. (2001). Defining the field of research in entrepreneurship. Journal of Business Venturing, 16(2), 165–180.
  • Bylander, M. (2015). Credit as coping: Rethinking microcredit in the Cambodian context. Oxford Development Studies, 43(4), 533–553.
  • Canales, R. (2011). Rule bending, sociological citizenship, and organizational contestation in microfinance. Regulation & Governance, 5(1), 90–117.
  • Castells, M., & Portes, A. (1989). World underneath. The origins, dynamics, and effects of the informal economy. In A. Portes, M. Castells, & L. Benton (Eds.), The informal economy; studies in advanced and less developed countries (pp. 11–37). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press.
  • Chung, H., & Gerber, E. (2010). Emotional storyboarding: A participatory design method for emotional designing for children. Proceedings of 7th nternational Conference on Design & Emotion, 5–7 October. Northwestern University. Available at http://egerber.mech.northwestern.edu/wpcontent/uploads/2012/11/Gerber_EmotionalStoryboarding1.pdf
  • Collins, D. (2008). Debt and household finance: Evidence from the financial diaries. Development Southern Africa, 25(4), 469–479.
  • Collins, D., Morduch, J., Rutherford, S., & Ruthven, O. (2009). Portfolios of the poor: How the world’s poor live on $2 a day. Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press.
  • Czarniawska-Joerges, B. (1997). Narrating the organization: Dramas of institutional identity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • D’Espallier, B., Guérin, I., & Mersland, R. (2011). Women and repayment in microfinance: A global analysis. World Development, 39(5), 758–772.
  • Denning, S. (2004). Telling Tales. Harvard Business Review, 5(1), 122–129.
  • Dichter, T. (2007a). Introduction. In T. Dichter & M. Harper (Eds.), What’s wrong with microfinance? (pp. 1–6). Warwickshire: Practical Action Publishing.
  • Dichter, T. (2007b). A second look at microfinance - The sequence of growth and credit in economic history. Development Policy Briefing Paper, CATO Institute (202), 1–13. Retrieved from http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=7517
  • Dickerson, M. (1999). Can shame, guilt, or stigma be taught? Why credit-focused financial education may not work. Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review, 32(4), 945–964.
  • Fadahunsi, A., & Rosa, P. (2002). Entrepreneurship and illegality: Insights from the Nigerian cross-border trade. Journal of Business Venturing, 17, 397–429.
  • Fairlie, R. W. (2002). Drug dealing and legitimate self-employment. Journal of Labor Economics, 20(3), 538–567.
  • Fernando, J. (2006). Micro-credit and empowerment of women: Blurring the boundary between development and capitalism. In J. Fernando (Ed.), Microfinance: Perils and prospects, routledge studies in development economics (pp. 162–205). London: Routlege.
  • Fisscher, O., Frenkel, D., Lurie, Y., & Nijhof, A. (2005). Stretching the frontiers: Exploring the relationships between entrepreneurship and ethics. Journal of Business Ethics, 60, 207–209.
  • Gertler, P., Levine, D. I., & Moretti, E. (2009). Do microfinance programs help families insure consumption against illness? Health Economics, 18(3), 257–273.
  • Goodman, R. (2017). Borrowing money, exchanging relationships: Making microfinance fit into local lives in Kumaon, India. World Development, 93, 362–373.
  • Grenier, P. (2006). Social entrepreneurship: Agency in a globalizing world. In A. Nicholls (Ed.), Social entrepreneurship: New paradigms of sustainable social change (pp. 119–143). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Guérin, I. (2012). Households’ over-indebtedness and the fallacy of financial education: Insights from economic anthropology. Microfinance in Crisis Working Papers Serie, 1. Paris: Paris I Sorbonne University/IRD.
  • Guérin, I., Kumar, S., & Agier, I. (2013). Women’s empowerment: Power to act or power over other women? Lessons from Indian microfinance. Oxford Development Studies, 41(Sup1), S76–S94.
  • Guérin, I., Roesch, M., Venkatasubramanian, G., & D’Espallier, B. (2012). Credit from whom and for what? The diversity of borrowing sources and uses in rural southern India. Journal of International Development, 24(1), 122–137.
  • Guyer, J. (1981). Household and community in African studies. African Studies Review, 24(2/3), 87–137.
  • Hart, K. (1988). Kinship, contract and trust. In D. Gambetta (Ed.), Trust: Making and breaking cooperative relations (pp. 176–193). Oxford: Blackwell.
  • Hudon, M. (2009). Should access to credit be a right? Journal of Business Ethics, 84(1), 17–28.
  • Huiskamp, G., & Hartmann-Mahmud, L. (2007). As development seeks to empower: Women from Mexico and Niger challenge theoretical categories. Journal of Poverty, 10(4), 1–26.
  • Johannisson, B., & Wigrem, C. (2009). The societal entrepreneur as provocateur. In M. Gawell, B. Johannisson, & M. Lundqvist (Eds.), Entrepreneurship in the name of society. Reader’s digest of a Swedish research anthology (pp. 47–51). Stockholm: Knowledge Foundation.
  • Karim, L. (2008). Demystifying micro-credit: The Grameen bank, NGOs, and neoliberalism in Bangladesh. Cultural Dynamics, 20(1), 5–29.
  • Karlan, D. S., & Zinman, J. (2012). List randomization for sensitive behavior: An application for measuring use of loan proceeds. Journal of Development Economics, 98(1), 71–75.
  • Labie, M., Laureti, C., & Szafarz, A. (2015). Discipline and flexibility: A behavioral perspective on product design in microfinance. CEB Working Paper 15/020.
  • Lepak, D. P., Smith, K. G., & Taylor, M. S. (2016). Value creation and value capture : A multilevel perspective. Academy of Management Review, 32(1), 180–194.
  • Malinowski, B. (1978). Argonauts of the Western Pacific: An account of native enterprise and adventure in the archipelagos of melanesian new Guinea. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
  • Marglin, S. A. (2008). The dismal science: How thinking like an economist undermines community. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • Mauss, M. (1990). The gift: The form and reason for exchange in archaic societies. New York and London: Norton.
  • Mersland, R., & Strøm, T. (2010). Microfinance mission drift? World Development, 38(1), 28–36.
  • Moraveji, N., Li, J., Ding, J., O’Kelley, P., & Woolf, S. (2007). Comic-boarding: Using comics as proxies for participatory design with children. Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on human factors in computing systems, San Jose, US, 1371–1374.
  • Morrison, E. W. (2006). Doing the job well: An investigation of pro-social rule breaking. Journal of Management, 32(1), 5–28.
  • Mulgan, G. (2006). The process of social innovation. Innovations: Technology Governance Globalization, 1(2), 145–162.
  • Nourse, H. T. (2001). The missing parts of microfinance: Services for consumption and insurance. SAIS Review, 21(1), 61–69.
  • Ritchie, J., Lewis, J., & Elam, G. (2003). Designing and selecting samples. In J. Richie & J. Lewis (Eds.), Qualitative research practice: A guide for social science students and researchers (pp. 77–108). London: Sage Publications.
  • Sayer, A. (2007). Moral economy as critique. New Political Economy, 12(2), 261–270.
  • Schicks, J. (2014). Over-indebtedness in microfinance — An empirical analysis of related factors on the borrower level. World Development, 54, 301–324.
  • Scott, W. R. (1995). Institutions and organizations. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
  • Shakya, Y. B., & Rankin, K. N. (2008). The politics of subversion in development practice: Microfinance in Nepal and Vietnam. Journal of Development Studies, 44(8), 1214–1235.
  • Shane, S. A., & Venkataraman, S. (2000). The promise of entrepreneurship as a field of research. Academy of Management Review, 25, 217–226.
  • Shipton, P. (1995). How Gambian save: Culture and economic strategy at an ethnic crossroad. In J. Guyer (Ed.), Money matters. Instability, values and social payments in the modern history of West-African communities (pp. 245–277). London and Portsmouth (NH): Currey Heinemann.
  • Snyder, P. J., Priem, R. L., & Levitas, E. (2009). The Diffusion of illegal innovations among management elites. Academy of management conference best paper proceedings, Chicago, US.
  • Webb, J. W., Tihanyi, L., Ireland, R. D., & Sirmon, D. G. (2009). You say illegal, i say legitimate: Entrepreneurship in the informal economy. Academy of Management Review, 34(3), 492–510.
  • Zhang, Z., & Arvey, R. D. (2009). Rule breaking in adolescence and entrepreneurial status: An empirical investigation. Journal of Business Venturing, 24, 436–447.