Emploi et entrepreneuriat migrant

Migrants may participate in local and global economies by creating employment opportunities, either for themselves or for others. Sometimes entrepreneurship is a solution for unemployment or underemployment. It may also operate within ethnic or linguistic niches, but is certainly not limited to these functions.

This topic includes studies that refer to (the development of) migrant businesses, entrepreneurial motivations, professional trajectories of migrants, ethnic/migrant niches, and the unemployment or underemployment of migrants.

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Do Networks Do the Works? Towards Recognising (and Solving) a Migration-Entrepreneurship Conundrum

Year 2013
Journal Name Central and Eastern European Migration Review
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2 Journal Article

A Review of Transnational Migrant Entrepreneurship: Perspectives on Unequal Spatialities

Authors Laure Sandoz, Christina Mittmasser, Yvonne Riaño, ...
Year 2021
Journal Name ZFW – Advances in Economic Geography
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3 Journal Article

The Transferability and Mobilisability of Transnational Social Resources

Authors Östen Wahlbeck
Year 2018
Journal Name Nordic Journal of Migration Research
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4 Journal Article

Measures to Support Early-Stage Migrant Entrepreneurs

Authors Giacomo Solano, Alexander Wolffhardt, Aldo Xhani
Description
Migrant entrepreneurship has received increasing attention from policy makers, stakeholders and scholars. In both the Action Plan for the integration of third country nationals and the 2020 Entrepreneurship Action Plan, the European Commission emphasises that entrepreneurship represents an alternative form of decent and sustainable employment for migrants. This also follows recent academic and non-academic studies on the topic (European Commission, 2016; Rath, Solano and Schutjens, 2019). There are at least four reasons why policies and measures should focus on supporting migrant entrepreneurs, especially in early stages of the business: • Self-employment represents a way towards empowerment. Although it cannot be taken for granted that self-employment provides migrants with a higher income in comparison to those who opted for a salaried employment (see Bradley, 2004), self-employment represents a way to tackle unemployment, and underemployment - professional downgrading and employment in poorly paid, dangerous and demanding jobs (Rath, Solano and Schutjens, 2019). Furthermore, through migrant entrepreneurship, migrants can improve their social status in the receiving society (Allen and Busse, 2016; Basu, 2001; Solano, 2015). • The impact of migrant entrepreneurship goes way beyond the benefits for the individual entrepreneur. In quantifiable terms, the number of firms, the employment creation, the volume in trade and sales are increasing, something that may benefit the economy in general (Desiderio, 2014). Migrant entrepreneurs also bring about qualitative economic and market changes that result in relatively new products and processes. They gravitate to particular neighborhoods or areas, thereby creating interesting places for leisure and consumption and revitalizing these areas (see, Aytar and Rath, 2012). • A relevant number of migrants starts a business. While many international migrants are economically active as wage workers (i.e., employees), a small but significant number has chosen or would like to start a business. About 13 per cent of all foreign-born migrants in OECD countries are selfemployed (OECD, 2010 and 2013). The same happens for the EU28 countries, in which around the 12% of foreign population is self-employed (Eurostat, 2017). In many countries the rate of self-employment among migrants is higher than the one of natives (Eurostat, 2017; OECD, 2010 and 2013). • Migrant-owned business are likely to fail and to be in low-profitable sectors. Despite self-employment and entrepreneurship represent a promising alternative option for migrants to access the labour market, they need to be adequately supported by policies and initiatives. In fact, migrant enterprises have higher failure rates than nativeowned ones and tend to concentrate in low-profitable sectors (e.g., petty trade) with no possibilities of growth (Desiderio and Mestres 2011; OECD, 2010; Rath and Schutjens, 2016). The difficulties that migrant entrepreneurs have in running the business is due to some specific obstacles that migrants – and, more in general, vulnerable groups -face when they want to start a business. The obstacles are well-known and there is an extensive literature on this (Desiderio, 2014; Rath and Swagerman, 2016): • they have difficulties in accessing credit, especially for financial institutions. As they often lack collaterals (e.g., they do not own a house), financial institutions are likely to deny credit to them. Consequently, migrant entrepreneurs normally receive small loans from relatives, friends and other migrants. This hampers the possibility of entering in sectors that requires a relevant starting capital, which are normally more profitable. • migrant entrepreneurs have difficulties to deal with the bureaucracy of the host country. They have difficulties in understanding all the administrative steps to start the business. • they (often) lack of familiarity with the (business) environment and the market where they start the business. Having only limited knowledge of the context of the destination country – with often information received from other migrants – tunnels them towards ethnic and/or not profitable markets. • a limited personal network, which is often composed of other migrants, does not help in dealing with bureaucracy or accessing information on potential unexplored market – as other migrants have often limited information as well. In conclusion, migrant entrepreneurship may represent an alternative way to access the labour market of the host | 2 country. However, migrant entrepreneurship often results in low-profitable highly-demanding micro businesses, which do not represent a decent form of employment. This is because of the barriers that migrants face when it comes to start a business. Migrant entrepreneurship needs to be supported to become an alternative form of decent employment. Policy makers and support providers (e.g. public employment services, NGOs, microcredit institutions) often face many obstacles in the design and implementation of support policies for migrant entrepreneurs. This handbook is addressed to policy makers in the field and support providers and aims at summarizing the main kinds of support that can be provided to migrant entrepreneurs and the factors for successful support measures. In doing this, we present some good practices.
Year 2019
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5 Report

Migration and Migrant Entrepreneurship in a German-Polish border region

Authors Anna Skraba, Magdalena Nowicka
Year 2018
Journal Name Studia Migracyjne – Przegląd Polonijny
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7 Journal Article

From Family Embeddedness to Families Embedding in Migrants' Opportunity Development Processes

Authors Quang Evansluong, Marcela Ramirez Pasillas
Year 2021
Journal Name Academy of Management. Annual Meeting Proceedings
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10 Journal Article

Immigration and Entrepreneurship

Year 2015
Book Title Handbook of the Economics of International Migration
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14 Book Chapter

Migration, entrepreneurship and development: critical questions

Authors Wim Naudé, Melissa Siegel, Katrin Marchand
Year 2017
Journal Name IZA Journal of Migration
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16 Journal Article

Ethnic and Immigrant Businesses Taxonomy and Its Impacts Towards Entrepreneurial Education

Authors Eduardo Picanço Cruz, Roberto Pessoa de Queiroz Falcão
Year 2020
Book Title Multidisciplinary Approach to Entrepreneurship Education for Migrants
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17 Book Chapter

Beyond "Little Taipei": The Development of Taiwanese Immigrant Businesses in Los Angeles

Authors Yen-Fen Tseng
Year 1995
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 42
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18 Journal Article

The Use of New Technologies by Migrant Entrepreneurs in Two European Cities

Authors Alberta Andreotti, Giacomo Solano
Year 2019
Book Title Diaspora Networks in International Business
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19 Book Chapter

Mobilization and disengagement: Chinese migrant entrepreneurs in urban France

Authors Winnie Lem
Year 2010
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
Citations (WoS) 7
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24 Journal Article

Segregated jobs or ethnic niches?

Authors Moshe Semyonov, Cedric Herring
Year 2007
Journal Name Research in Social Stratification and Mobility
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25 Journal Article

Exploring the Role of Privilege in Migrant Women’s Self-Employment

Authors Natasha A. Webster, Karen Haandrikman
Year 2022
Journal Name Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice
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26 Journal Article

Migrant labor in hospitality: The Cyprus experience

Authors Anastasios Zopiatis, Panayiotis Constanti, Antonis L. Theocharous
Year 2014
Journal Name International Journal of Hospitality Management
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29 Journal Article

Digital ethnicity affordances: from a liability to an asset in immigrant entrepreneurship

Authors Quang Evansluong, Lena Grip, Eva Karayianni
Year 2023
Journal Name International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research
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30 Journal Article

Design study on a scheme to attract non-EU resident highly skilled entrepreneurial innovators

Description
Objective: The objective of the study is to design an EU-wide scheme to attract high-skilled non-EU resident entrepreneurial innovators, and to facilitate the creation and development of high-potential companies in Europe. The study fits to the EC’s objective to boost innovation, growth and investments by unleashing the EU’s full capacities and competitiveness, while addressing the consequences of demographic ageing and offsetting skills shortages in the continent. Summary: The study will recommend a scheme to attract 20,000 migrant entrepreneurs per year to the EU through the creation of an electronic platform of services to potential migrant entrepreneurs, possible financial support and a promotion campaign. The direct objectives of the schemes are to facilitate access to the EU for non-EU nationals (visa scheme), create incentives (including linking to financial support), facilitate access to EU ecosystems, incubator schemes and private funding (via the platform) as well as to inform aspiring entrepreneurs. The study will include amongst other an assessment of existing (public and semi-public) initiatives in following EU Member States: Austria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, France, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, United Kingdom, and Spain. Moreover, it will benchmark these against schemes in a number of non-EU countries with successful entrepreneurial support initiatives.
Year 2016
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31 Project

The Chances of the second Generation in Families of migrant Entrepreneurs

Authors Ursula Apitzsch
Year 2005
Journal Name Revue européenne des migrations internationales
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32 Journal Article

Structural Opportunity or Ethnic Advantage? Immigrant Business Development in New York

Authors Roger Waldinger
Year 1989
Journal Name International Migration Review
Citations (WoS) 57
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37 Journal Article

Immigrant business in transnational contexts: a multifocal understanding of the breakout process

Authors Jude Kenechi Onyima, Stephen Syrett, Leandro Sepulveda
Year 2024
Journal Name International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research
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42 Journal Article

Processos de Transnacionalismo nos Empresários Nepaleses em Lisboa

Authors ISEG - University of Lisbon, Alexandra Pereira
Year 2021
Journal Name XI Portuguese Sociology Congress Papers
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44 Journal Article

ETHNIC ENTREPRENEURS - IMMIGRANT BUSINESS IN INDUSTRIAL-SOCIETIES - WALDINGER,RW, ALDRICH,H, WARD,R

Authors LJD WACQUANT
Year 1993
Journal Name Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales
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45 Journal Article

Revisiting Ethnic Niches: A Comparative Analysis of the Labor Market Experiences of Asian and Latino Undocumented Young Adults

Authors Esther Yoona Cho
Year 2017
Journal Name RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences
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46 Journal Article

Immigrant business and niche formation in historical perspective: The Netherlands in the nineteenth century

Authors Marlou Schrover
Year 2001
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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47 Journal Article

The paradoxes of creativity in Guangzhou, China's wholesale market for fast fashion

Authors Nellie Chu
Year 2018
Journal Name Culture, Theory and Critique
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49 Journal Article

Migrant mentoring to work: Defining an old but- innovative instrument

Authors Cuyper P. De
Year 2019
Journal Name International Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and Mentoring
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50 Journal Article
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