International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research—Exploring Entrepreneurship Policy in a

When:  Dec 1, 2022 from 09:00 to 23:59 (UTC)
Associated with  Entrepreneurship (ENT)

Open for submissions 1 November 2022

Introduction 

Women are less likely to be entrepreneurs than men in most countries around the globe, and they tend to start smaller and less dynamic businesses than their male counterparts (GEM, 2021; OECD, 2021). This impacts negatively on local economies and reduces revenue-generating opportunities for women and their families. The OECD has posited that if women were to participate in early-stage entrepreneurship at the same rate as core-age men, there could be as many as 25 million additional entrepreneurs across OECD countries (OECD, 2021). 

Policy support for women entrepreneurs is critical to helping more women engage in entrepreneurial activity. However, current entrepreneurship policy instruments in most countries have been shown to be biased toward male models of entrepreneurship and do not take into consideration the different challenges women face in their entrepreneurial endeavours and the different contexts in which they operate (Henry, Coleman, Foss, Orser & Brush, 2021). A recent report by the OECD in conjunction with the Global Women’s Entrepreneurship Policy Research Network (GWEP) found that many countries lack a formal overarching entrepreneurship policy; have no dedicated women’s entrepreneurship policy; offer few or no programmes that operationalise their policy; or have no evaluative measures in place to determine which initiatives are working and which are not (OECD-GWEP, 2021). Furthermore, academic research has demonstrated that scholars continuously fail to offer policy recommendations from their research work (Foss, Henry & Ahl, 2018). This, despite policy being identified as an important part of the entrepreneurial ecosystem (Mason & Brown, 2017; Spiegel & Harrison, 2018; Isenberg, 2010), and the overall effectiveness of entrepreneurship policies being called in to question (Arshed, Cater & Mason, 2014; Nziku & Henry, 2021).

The aim of this Special Issue (SI) is to gather a collection of high calibre research-based articles that explore entrepreneurship policy from a gender perspective and, in so doing, to offer valuable insights into the gendered nature of entrepreneurship policy. The SI will highlight issues relating to culture, skills, finance, networks and regulations, and argue that current public policies for entrepreneurship are often inadequate to address the gender gap. Potential policy solutions will also be identified, and existing ‘promising practice’ policy examples will be highlighted. Our overall objective is that – based on findings from this SI collection – scholars will have a much better understanding of the nature of entrepreneurship policy, its embedded gender biases, its generally (although not exclusively) perceived ineffectiveness, the importance of linking policy instruments to the wider entrepreneurial ecosystem, the importance of including women at the design stage, and the need to ensure relevant monitoring and evaluation mechanisms are built into all policies from the outset. This SI will also provide valuable insights into theoretical frameworks and methodological approaches that are appropriate to the study of entrepreneurship policy when applying a gender lens, including new theories and methods.

List of topic areas

  • To what extent does policy influence gender differences in the scale and nature of entrepreneurship activity? 
  • How and to what extent is current entrepreneurship policy gendered?
  • What needs to change in current entrepreneurship policies in order for them to be more gender-focused?  
  • How can policy frameworks be evaluated or improved upon?
  • To what extent are current entrepreneurship policies targeted at women entrepreneurs connected to the broader entrepreneurial ecosystem?
  • What can policy-makers learn from previous policy-making efforts, and are there specific lessons to be learned from developed/under-developed countries?
  • Are there notable entrepreneurship policy differences between countries?
  • What evaluation and monitoring frameworks can be applied to entrepreneurship policies?
  • How does context affect entrepreneurship policy?
  • What existing theoretical frameworks and methods are appropriate to the critical and robust exploration of entrepreneurship policy from a gender perspective?

Submission Information

Submissions are made using ScholarOne Manuscripts. Registration and access are available at: https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ijebr

Author guidelines must be strictly followed. Please see: https://www.emeraldgrouppublishing.com/journal/ijebr#author-guidelines

Authors should select (from the drop-down menu) the special issue title at the appropriate step in the submission process, i.e. in response to “Please select the issue you are submitting to”. 

Submitted articles must not have been previously published, nor should they be under consideration for publication anywhere else, while under review for this journal.

Key deadlines

Opening date for manuscripts submissions: 1 November 2022

Closing date for manuscripts submission: 1 December 2022

Closing date for abstract submission (encouraged, but not compulsory): 30 June 2022 

Email for submissions: Colette.henry@dkit.ie

Guest Editors

Professor Colette Henry, Dundalk Institute of Technology Ireland & Griffith University Australia, Colette.henry@dkit.ie

Professor Joan Ballantine, Ulster University, UK, joan.ballantine@ulster.ac.uk

Professor Marcus Dejardin, Universite de Namur & Universite Catholique de Louvain, Belgium, marcus.dejardin@unamur.be

Professor Helle Neergaard, Aarhus University, Denmark, helle.neergaard@mgmt.au.dk                

Professor Alena Krizkova, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic, alena.krizkova@soc.cas.cz