The Intersection of Entrepreneurial Identity and Ethnic Identity: An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis of Black African Migrant Entrepreneurs in the UK
Ph. D. ThesisRecently, entrepreneurship research is beginning to identify how identity shapes the
practice and discourse of entrepreneurship. This burgeoning stream of research
explores how multiple dimensions of identity intersect, to create and reproduce
inequality in entrepreneurship. This study builds on such area of research to explore
the role of identity in entrepreneurship. In particular, it explores the intersection of
entrepreneurial identity and ethnic identity among black African migrants practising
entrepreneurship in Britain. The research focuses on the question: ‘how do black
African migrant entrepreneurs balance, negotiate and experience their (potentially
disparate) identities as ‘entrepreneurs’ and ‘ethnic minorities’ within their lives?’
Qualitative data was elicited by phenomenologically exploring the narratives of the
lived experiences of participants. The analysis is based on the different ways black
migrant entrepreneurs perceive, interpret and make sense of their identity in
entrepreneurship. Research findings show the pervasiveness of whiteness in
entrepreneurship. The entrepreneurial space in Britain structurally excludes black
ethnic identity. Structural forces that create and sustain inequality in the labour market
are also at play in entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurship is a site of identity negotiation.
To navigate this entrepreneurial space, they employed different dramaturgical
performances and enacted certain identity work such as hard work and different
masking strategies, in their attempt to be seen as legitimate entrepreneurial actors.
Ethnicity plays different roles in entrepreneurship. It is perceived as a source of
advantage for exploring ethnic and co-ethnic markets and as a source of disadvantage
for accessing mainstream markets in the host country. Findings show the gendered
nature of identity work, as black female migrant entrepreneurs tend to compensate
more for their identity in entrepreneurship. This research contributes to the study of
migrant entrepreneurship by showing how intersectional identities influence
entrepreneurial venturing and activities.Newcastle University Overseas Research Scholarshi
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