The Effects of Women’s Entrepreneurship Activity on Sustainable Economic Performance
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Sustainable Management".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 September 2020) | Viewed by 18884
Special Issue Editors
Interests: business ethics; monetary economics; entrepreneurial economics; economic growth
Interests: innovation knowledge; entrepreneurship; information technology
Interests: entrepreneurship; women’s entrepreneurship; innovation; international accounting
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
During the past several decades, an important body of literature on entrepreneurship has arisen. Entrepreneurs use the resources that society puts in their hands to produce more or new goods and services, therefore increasing the societal welfare. Authors have also occasionally worried about the effects of entrepreneurs on economic progress, considering the role of technology and innovation on economic agents’ behavior. In these studies, depending on whether the authors considered positive or negative effects of entrepreneurship, measures have been presented that could enhance or reduce the negative effects of these activities.
On the other hand, the active participation of entrepreneurs in the working world is increasingly apparent with the consolidation of their presence in business at every level, and with the development of economic spaces where entrepreneurial groups can express their potential and creativity. This has obliged policy-makers within the global economy to consider entrepreneurship as a determining variable in any political force, not only for bodies and groups created specifically to this end, but also for any decision-making body.
In this sense, women have developed a relevant entrepreneurship activity that has had positive effects on economic growth and other economic policy objectives. However, they present some different aspects in their activity, and they must deal with some different problems from men’s entrepreneurship activities that must be analyzed—this has usually not been considered within the existing literature.
This Special Issue aims to collect up-to-date research articles that explore and examine the effects of women’s entrepreneurship on economic activity in order to achieve the main economic objectives and improve social welfare.
Prof. Dr. Miguel-Ángel Galindo-Martín
Prof. Dr. Daniel Palacios-Marqués
Prof. Dr. María-Teresa Méndez-Picazo
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- women's entrepreneurship
- economic policies
- growth
- innovation
- knowledge
- networks
- microcredit
- social entrepreneurship
- internationalization
- finance
- countries' experiences
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