Understanding the entrepreneurial resilience of indigenous women entrepreneurs as a dynamic process. The case of Quechuas in Bolivia
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Taylor & Francis
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Abstract
Little literature exists regarding the study of entrepreneurial resilience of
indigenous women entrepreneurs (IWEs) in environments challenged
with isolation, marginalization, or poverty. New insights that explain the
role of resilience in the creation, survival, and development of entrepre-
neurial activities by indigenous people are needed. In this research, we
defined, in the context of IWEs, the individual traits embedded in entre-
preneurial resilience. Then, we applied a qualitative approach to analyse
the cases of 32 IWEs, these being current entrepreneurs located in street
or organized markets in Cochabamba (Bolivia). Interviews and self-
identified critical life incidents were used to illustrate how these IWEs
developed their entrepreneurial activities and how resilience influenced
the emergence and improvement of those activities over time. This work
contributes to the entrepreneurship literature: first, by showing how IWEs’
individual entrepreneurial resilience traits help to explain the develop-
ment of entrepreneurial activities, as a way of survival and personal
improvement and, second, by proposing the dynamic entrepreneurial
resilience spiral as a process of increasing individual resilience and build-
ing community resilience, where the IWEs empowerment plays a key role
overcoming environmental circumstances, with education and training
developing a leverage effect.
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Bibliographic citation
Antonio Padilla-Meléndez, Antonio Manuel Ciruela-Lorenzo, Ana Rosa
Del-Aguila-Obra & Juan Jose Plaza-Angulo (2022) Understanding the entrepreneurial
resilience of indigenous women entrepreneurs as a dynamic process. The case of
Quechuas in Bolivia, Entrepreneurship & Regional Development, 34:9-10, 852-867, DOI:
10.1080/08985626.2022.2103744











