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Emancipatory Entrepreneurship y Marginalidad - Coggle Diagram
Emancipatory Entrepreneurship y Marginalidad
Emancipatory Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship as a process of freedom from structural constraints.
Focus on creating
Businesses
Products
Processes
Balances
economic viability
social transformation
Examples
Bumble
Green Bridge Growers
Collettey’s Cookies
Marginality and Structural Disadvantage
Marginalized groups operate within systems that favor dominant interests
Experience limited access
to resources
to networks
capital
Structural disadvantage
reduced agency and opportunity
Examples
Gender bias
Racial inequality
Disability exclusion
Market–Emancipation Compatibility
Refers to the alignment between market goals (profit, efficiency) and emancipatory goals (equity, empowerment)
High compatibility
greater potential for entrepreneurship to create liberation
Two key dimensions
Ends-compatibility
Means-compatibility
Ends-compatibility & Means-compatibility
Ends-compatibility
When market success and emancipation support each other
Example
Bumble’s feminist design increased both profits and women’s safety
Means-compatibility
When marginalized groups have access to the resources needed to act entrepreneurially
Example
Education programs or supportive networks enhance means-compatibility
Intersectionality
The interaction
gender
race
class
ability
shapes access to entrepreneurial opportunities
Some within marginalized groups have intersecting privileges
Privilege increases the likelihood of exploiting opportunities
Example
A white
Upper-class woman
Resourcefulness & Cultural Capital
Resourcefulness
Ability to “do more with less”; innovate with limited tools or access
Cultural capital
Knowledge, language, and social understanding needed to navigate entrepreneurial systems
Together, they help marginalized entrepreneurs create solutions and circumvent barriers
Example
use alternative networks to distribute a paper during segregation