This article evaluates critically the competing explanations for informal sector entrepreneurship that read such endeavours to result from either ‘exclusion’ from state benefits and the circuits of the modern economy or the voluntary ‘exit’ of workers from formal institutions. Reporting evidence from a 2003 survey in urban Brazil, it is revealed that similar proportions of informal sector entrepreneurs explain their participation to result from their involuntary exclusion and voluntary exit from the formal economy. The outcome is a call to shift from an either/or to a both/and approach when explaining informal sector entrepreneurship and for wider research on the relative weightings given to exit and exclusion in different contexts so as to...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate the contrasting explanations for the cross-national variations ...
In recent years, a new institutionalist theory has emerged to explain the prevalence of informal sec...
Given the prevalence of informality, this article proposes a typology for classifying countries by t...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate critically the widely-held assumption that entrepreneurs operat...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate four competing theoretical perspectives that explain cross-nati...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate critically four competing theories that variously explain infor...
Over the past decade or so, two competing theoretical perspectives have arisen that explain particip...
To advance understanding of the relationship between entrepreneurship and the informal sector, the a...
The informal economy remains understudied and a misunderstood phenomenon. This dissertation examines...
The informal economy remains understudied and a misunderstood phenomenon. This dissertation examines...
This paper evaluates critically the assumption that entrepreneurs who start-up their business ventu...
To advance understanding of the reasons for informal sector entrepreneurship, this paper evaluates t...
Mirroring the representation of informal workers in a third world context as displaying entrepreneur...
Mirroring the representation of informal workers in a third world context as displaying entrepreneur...
The aim of this paper is to contribute to the entrepreneurship literature that has sought to deconst...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate the contrasting explanations for the cross-national variations ...
In recent years, a new institutionalist theory has emerged to explain the prevalence of informal sec...
Given the prevalence of informality, this article proposes a typology for classifying countries by t...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate critically the widely-held assumption that entrepreneurs operat...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate four competing theoretical perspectives that explain cross-nati...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate critically four competing theories that variously explain infor...
Over the past decade or so, two competing theoretical perspectives have arisen that explain particip...
To advance understanding of the relationship between entrepreneurship and the informal sector, the a...
The informal economy remains understudied and a misunderstood phenomenon. This dissertation examines...
The informal economy remains understudied and a misunderstood phenomenon. This dissertation examines...
This paper evaluates critically the assumption that entrepreneurs who start-up their business ventu...
To advance understanding of the reasons for informal sector entrepreneurship, this paper evaluates t...
Mirroring the representation of informal workers in a third world context as displaying entrepreneur...
Mirroring the representation of informal workers in a third world context as displaying entrepreneur...
The aim of this paper is to contribute to the entrepreneurship literature that has sought to deconst...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate the contrasting explanations for the cross-national variations ...
In recent years, a new institutionalist theory has emerged to explain the prevalence of informal sec...
Given the prevalence of informality, this article proposes a typology for classifying countries by t...