On the design of Islamic blended microfinancing for refugee entrepreneurship: an institutional logic perspective
On the design of Islamic blended microfinancing for refugee entrepreneurship: an institutional logic perspective
Uncovering apt policy for refugee self-reliance is intricate. Refugee entrepreneurship is often hailed as the way forward for such an objective as it deciphers ‘Canvas Ceiling’. However, the lack of financing for unfeasible and unbankable refugee entrepreneurs prevents this from materialising. This article proposes Islamic blended microfinance for refugee entrepreneurship, integrating state support, the private sector, the philanthropic funds, and Islamic values. Our model differs as it is developed through the lens of the competing logic discussed in the institutional theory. Understanding competing institutional logic is crucial as blended finance involves various agents with distinct moral preferences that are often overlooked by policymakers. We test our model in the spatial context of Indonesia, the home of microfinance and blended Islamic finance. The findings outline that the logics of the three agents and religion (Islam) can converge in contextuality and temporality dimensions. A key to attaining this equilibrium is to meticulously design the payoff between the private sector with market logic and the philanthropic institutions with universal community logic, making them contingent on the state of the economy.
25-37
Jatmiko, Wahyu
77c12c27-492a-4683-802a-a02a89025ce7
Azizon, A.
57aab63b-d76f-4332-820c-cb8ba34ecfee
Sukmana, Raditya
d403ba85-da11-4e04-85a1-8140c4b5b3d1
11 February 2025
Jatmiko, Wahyu
77c12c27-492a-4683-802a-a02a89025ce7
Azizon, A.
57aab63b-d76f-4332-820c-cb8ba34ecfee
Sukmana, Raditya
d403ba85-da11-4e04-85a1-8140c4b5b3d1
Jatmiko, Wahyu, Azizon, A. and Sukmana, Raditya
(2025)
On the design of Islamic blended microfinancing for refugee entrepreneurship: an institutional logic perspective.
Global Policy, 16 (S1), .
(doi:10.1111/1758-5899.13475).
Abstract
Uncovering apt policy for refugee self-reliance is intricate. Refugee entrepreneurship is often hailed as the way forward for such an objective as it deciphers ‘Canvas Ceiling’. However, the lack of financing for unfeasible and unbankable refugee entrepreneurs prevents this from materialising. This article proposes Islamic blended microfinance for refugee entrepreneurship, integrating state support, the private sector, the philanthropic funds, and Islamic values. Our model differs as it is developed through the lens of the competing logic discussed in the institutional theory. Understanding competing institutional logic is crucial as blended finance involves various agents with distinct moral preferences that are often overlooked by policymakers. We test our model in the spatial context of Indonesia, the home of microfinance and blended Islamic finance. The findings outline that the logics of the three agents and religion (Islam) can converge in contextuality and temporality dimensions. A key to attaining this equilibrium is to meticulously design the payoff between the private sector with market logic and the philanthropic institutions with universal community logic, making them contingent on the state of the economy.
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Global Policy - 2025 - Jatmiko - On the Design of Islamic Blended Microfinancing for Refugee Entrepreneurship An
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 November 2024
Published date: 11 February 2025
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 498988
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498988
ISSN: 1758-5880
PURE UUID: 2f7f3bd7-e9d7-482d-9ef6-3e800e5124e7
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Date deposited: 06 Mar 2025 17:37
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:42
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Contributors
Author:
Wahyu Jatmiko
Author:
A. Azizon
Author:
Raditya Sukmana
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