This study explores the underexposed possibilities of starting and running a business by Mennonite women in the Kleine Gemeinde community of Blue Creek, Belize. The paper is the result of ethnographic fieldwork research combined with a literature study. We address the changing role of Kleine Gemeinde women in the Mennonite settlement of Blue Creek in Northern Belize, Central America. This Mennonite settlement has its roots in Canada. The labour system of the Mennonites enterprises is mainly organised independently from the general Belizean labour system with the help of their Canadian families. Mennonite women have gained a pivotal position in this independent system over the past years. Traditionally, Mennonite women stay at home to work i...
In recent years there has been in Canada, as in other industrial societies, a substantial increase i...
Mennonite migrants coming to southern Manitoba from south Russia in the 1870s and afterwards brought...
https://historicalpapers.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/historicalpapers/article/view/3926
This article addresses the role of women in the labour system of the Mennonite entrepreneurs in a co...
This study is a social history of Canadian Mennonite women's societies in the two largest Russian Me...
Purpose A central theme in the literature on entrepreneurship in remote communities – be they religi...
This article addresses the entrepreneurial and organisational activities of a specific Mennonite gro...
Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG-geförderten) Allianz- bzw. ...
Within the Old Colony Mennonite settlements of Belize, the relationship between religious and econom...
The Dene are a subarctic people indigenous to northern Canada. The indirect and direct contact the D...
During the early 1920s, Old Colony Mennonites emigrated from Canada to Chihuahua, Mexico in order to...
The dominant representation of domestic work in the literature is quite negative, with uncaring empl...
Within the Old Colony Mennonite settlements of Belize, the relationship between religious and econom...
This thesis documents the employment history of Sne-nay-muxw women. The Sne nay-muxw, a Coast Salis...
This study examines the types of restraints and sources of empowerment experienced by working Amish ...
In recent years there has been in Canada, as in other industrial societies, a substantial increase i...
Mennonite migrants coming to southern Manitoba from south Russia in the 1870s and afterwards brought...
https://historicalpapers.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/historicalpapers/article/view/3926
This article addresses the role of women in the labour system of the Mennonite entrepreneurs in a co...
This study is a social history of Canadian Mennonite women's societies in the two largest Russian Me...
Purpose A central theme in the literature on entrepreneurship in remote communities – be they religi...
This article addresses the entrepreneurial and organisational activities of a specific Mennonite gro...
Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG-geförderten) Allianz- bzw. ...
Within the Old Colony Mennonite settlements of Belize, the relationship between religious and econom...
The Dene are a subarctic people indigenous to northern Canada. The indirect and direct contact the D...
During the early 1920s, Old Colony Mennonites emigrated from Canada to Chihuahua, Mexico in order to...
The dominant representation of domestic work in the literature is quite negative, with uncaring empl...
Within the Old Colony Mennonite settlements of Belize, the relationship between religious and econom...
This thesis documents the employment history of Sne-nay-muxw women. The Sne nay-muxw, a Coast Salis...
This study examines the types of restraints and sources of empowerment experienced by working Amish ...
In recent years there has been in Canada, as in other industrial societies, a substantial increase i...
Mennonite migrants coming to southern Manitoba from south Russia in the 1870s and afterwards brought...
https://historicalpapers.journals.yorku.ca/index.php/historicalpapers/article/view/3926