19 research outputs found
Preventing phone theft and robbery: the need for government action and international coordination
The banning of stolen handsets from networks has been around for 20 years, but remains little used internationally. Where used, its effectiveness is hindered by implementation problems, reprogramming, easy fencing opportunities, and international trafficking. Kill-switches where the user remotely disables a handset and deletes data have potential but, if non-permanent, are likely to experience similar limitations. This study proposes a set of responses to be adopted by national governments with international coordination
Accounting for the Transitions after Entrepreneurial Business Failure: An Emerging Market Perspective
This study builds on prior scholarly works on institutions and entrepreneurship by examining the
process of transitions and institutional obstacles that force serial entrepreneurs’ shift to operate in
the formal or informal sector after entrepreneurial business failures. Using insights from 32 serial
entrepreneurs in Ghana, a framework was developed and utilized to explicate how the pull and
push motivations for the transition into or persisting with formality or informality after business
failure unfolds over time. Our analysis sheds light on the processes and effects of the motivations
on the persistently high level of entrepreneurial activities in the informal sector for many emerging
economies