From intersectionality to decolonial feminism: critical perspectives on women and migrant entrepreneurship
From intersectionality to decolonial feminism: critical perspectives on women and migrant entrepreneurship
This chapter critically examines current analyses of the entrepreneurial practices of migrant women in the Global North, and it proposes a decolonial approach to rethink the connections between patriarchy, postcoloniality, and neoliberal subjectivities. Departing from intersectionality and translocational positionality, we argue that, whilst these theories have been extremely valuable in bringing to the fore the diversity of women migrant entrepreneurs and their relation to the inclusion and exclusion to resources, they have not gone far enough to expose the colonial powers that often undergird these intersections and therefore have circumvented more politically informed debates around entrepreneurship. Drawing on critical contributions from decolonial feminism, this chapter focuses on the ontology and epistemology of decoloniality to address this idea of (colonial) power and politics at its core. It suggests that a decolonial approach turns its attention to the analysis of structures and the colonial powers inherent in women migrant entrepreneurship, and it critically examines with the emancipation rationale that entrepreneurship might bring to migrant women.
decolonial feminism, migration, entrepreneurship, intersectionality, patriarchy, capitalism
Cruz Garcia, Ana
9f35e8b9-3680-45a0-b2cd-96bb6020214c
Villares-Varela, Maria
5e63e77d-525f-4196-8be8-e8c7db56eae1
Cruz Garcia, Ana
9f35e8b9-3680-45a0-b2cd-96bb6020214c
Villares-Varela, Maria
5e63e77d-525f-4196-8be8-e8c7db56eae1
Cruz Garcia, Ana and Villares-Varela, Maria
(2025)
From intersectionality to decolonial feminism: critical perspectives on women and migrant entrepreneurship.
In,
Research Handbook on Critical Entrepreneurship Studies.
Edward Elgar Publishing.
(In Press)
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Book Section
Abstract
This chapter critically examines current analyses of the entrepreneurial practices of migrant women in the Global North, and it proposes a decolonial approach to rethink the connections between patriarchy, postcoloniality, and neoliberal subjectivities. Departing from intersectionality and translocational positionality, we argue that, whilst these theories have been extremely valuable in bringing to the fore the diversity of women migrant entrepreneurs and their relation to the inclusion and exclusion to resources, they have not gone far enough to expose the colonial powers that often undergird these intersections and therefore have circumvented more politically informed debates around entrepreneurship. Drawing on critical contributions from decolonial feminism, this chapter focuses on the ontology and epistemology of decoloniality to address this idea of (colonial) power and politics at its core. It suggests that a decolonial approach turns its attention to the analysis of structures and the colonial powers inherent in women migrant entrepreneurship, and it critically examines with the emancipation rationale that entrepreneurship might bring to migrant women.
Text
Chapter on Decolonial Feminism, Migration and Entrepreneurship. After review. 7 Feb 2025_MVV
- Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 5 March 2026.
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 March 2025
Keywords:
decolonial feminism, migration, entrepreneurship, intersectionality, patriarchy, capitalism
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Local EPrints ID: 499812
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499812
PURE UUID: b6ad200b-6838-4578-a78c-082f84f6a114
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Date deposited: 07 Apr 2025 16:30
Last modified: 08 Apr 2025 01:52
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Author:
Ana Cruz Garcia
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