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Past, Present and Future Changes in Migrant Entrepreneurship Landscape

 

Journal

 <https://www.emeraldgrouppublishing.com/journal/jocm> Journal of
Organizational Change Management

Guest editor(s)

 <mailto:[log in to unmask]> Quang Evansluong,
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> Beata Glinka,  <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
Jörg Freiling,  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> Marcela
Ramírez-Pasillas,  <mailto:[log in to unmask]> Leo Paul Dana

 


Introduction


Migrant entrepreneurship refers to the process of venture creation by
refugees, forced labor, immigrants, expats, and ethnic minority i.e.,
individuals, teams, groups, or families who were born abroad (1st
generation), or were born in the host country, but at least one of their
parents was born outside of the host country (2nd generation). Research on
entrepreneurship by immigrants, refugees, ex-pats, and ethnic minorities has
developed since the 1970s and gained both academic and practitioner
attention in the last few decades. The landscape of migrant entrepreneurship
has witnessed major changes in the nature and scope of the ventures and how
migrant entrepreneurs establish and run businesses for the last few decades
(e.g., Elo et al., 2022; Sinkovic and Reuben, 2021; Dabic et al., 2020; Ram
et al., 2017).  Migrant, refugee, expat, and ethnic minority entrepreneurs
their businesses have transformed the ecosystems and changed the relations
in various business and social networks (Baron and Harima, 2019; Schafer and
Henn, 2018). By doing so, they also influence the ways other companies are
managed.
Migrant entrepreneurship has shifted from enclave ventures to break-in the
country of residence’s ethnic market, for instance, ethnic restaurants or
ethnic food stores, nail-shops which primarily served the need of the
intra-ethnic communities (Bagwell, 2008; Dana, 2007; Kloosterman et al.,
2001) to mainstream businesses to break-out and break-through creating new
trends and setting new standards in serving the country of residence’s
market, for instance, high-end restaurants which offer fusion food with
high-quality interior design attracting inter-ethnic customers (Evansluong
et al., 2019; Griffin-EL and Olabisi, 2018). 
The role of migrant ventures has moved from filling in the labour shortage
and outsourcing services to developing the technologies for the local
businesses in the country of residence’s market as well as for the global
market (Machado and Freiling, 2023; Mosbah et al., 2018; Saxenia, 2000).  
How migrant entrepreneurs mobilize resources has also changed from the
traditional way of from family and co-ethnic ties to the transnational
network moving beyond the country of origin (Evansluong et al., 2023; Glinka
et al., 2023). 
Migrant entrepreneurship plays an essential role in the migrant’
contributions to the country of residence and the country of origin’s
social, environmental, and economic development.  The diverse impacts of
migrant entrepreneurship are not only prominent in the country of residence
by the migrant entrepreneurs (Jones et al., 2018) but also significant in
the country of origin by the returnee entrepreneurs (Truong, 2020; Bai et
al., 2018). 


List of Topic Areas


The Special Issue welcomes multidisciplinary research, including
theoretically driven papers, (systematic) literature reviews, and empirical
contributions. We propose (but do not limit) the following topic areas on
migrant, ex-pat, refugee, diaspora, and ethnic minorities:

* Towards advantaged migrant entrepreneurs? Between disadvantaged and
advantaged role of migrant entrepreneurs

* Changes in migrant entrepreneurship by individuals, teams, groups or
families 

* Changes in transnational entrepreneurship by individuals, teams, groups or
families 

* From traditional activities to diversified ventures: changing characters
and forms of migrant businesses

* Returnees as entrepreneurs: changing roles in economy and society

* Family involvement in entrepreneurial activities – changing roles of
family ties

* Evolving character of mixed embeddedness in entrepreneurial activities 

* First and second-generation migrant entrepreneurial activities:
similarities and differences

* Gender and intersectionality influences as factors influencing change in
migrant entrepreneurship 

* Entrepreneurship in emerging economies and developing countries: evolving
roles, and redefined characters

* Opportunity development processes 

* Role of migrant entrepreneurs in receiving countries revisited

* Shifts in migrant entrepreneurship in (post-) pandemic times 

* The role of technological advancements in reshaping migrant
entrepreneurship 

* Entrepreneurial finance in migrant owned ventures

* Changing landscape of entrepreneurship: displaced entrepreneurship,
lifestyle migrant entrepreneurship, and expat-preneurship 

* Migrant and ethnic minority entrepreneur’s mental health and well-being
(MWB) 

* The bright, the dark and the in between of migrant and ethnic minority
entrepreneurship 

* Social, environmental and economic sustainability of migrant
entrepreneurship

* Migrant entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial ecosystems

* Incubators and accelerators for migrant entrepreneurship support

* Migrant entrepreneurship between assets and liabilities of foreignness 

* The role of entrepreneurship in political, cultural, environmental and
economic changes in home and host countries 

* Domestic migrant entrepreneurship

* New challenges in migrant entrepreneurship research


Submissions Information


Submissions are made using ScholarOne Manuscripts. Registration and access
are available  <https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jocm> here.
Author guidelines must be strictly followed. Please see
<http://https/www.emeraldgrouppublishing.com/journal/jocm> here.
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


Submissions Open: April 30th 2024

Submissions Close: October 30th 2024 

 

 

Further information and submission 

https://www.emeraldgrouppublishing.com/calls-for-papers/past-present-and-fut
ure-changes-migrant-entrepreneurship-landscape

 

________________________________________________________________­­­­­­­­­­­­
­­­­­­­­­­­

Dr. Jörg Freiling, Full Professor

 

LEMEX – Chair in Small Business & Entrepreneurship

Faculty for Business Studies & Economics

University of Bremen

Enrique Schmidt Str. 1

D-28359 Bremen

 

T: (49) 0421/218-66870

L: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joerg-freiling-75433519/ 

W:  <https://www.uni-bremen.de/en/lemex> https://www.uni-bremen.de/en/lemex

________________________________________________________________

 


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