Futures paper final.pdf (692.4 kB)
Bricolage and informal businesses: Young entrepreneurs in the mobile telephony sector in Accra, Ghana
journal contribution
posted on 2022-01-17, 13:45 authored by Robert Lawrence Afutu-Kotey, Katherine V. GoughKatherine V. GoughThe concept of bricolage has primarily been used in exploring how entrepreneurs in the formal sector, in addition to social entrepreneurs, mobilise resources in developing their businesses. Little is known, however, about the bricolage experiences of young informal entrepreneurs in the rapidly changing, technologically driven mobile telephony sector. Drawing on qualitative field research with young people involved in informal support services in the mobile telephony sector in Accra, Ghana, the paper reveals the existence of various kinds of bricolage processes employed in the running and sustenance of their businesses. The findings show evidence of young people switching from one business to another, engaging in business diversification, utilising pre-existing skills, and employing bottom-up approaches through their social networks in mobilising resources — all of which relate to bricolage processes of improvisation, ‘making do’ and refusing to be constrained by limitations in the resource environment. Although young people are shown to utilise strategies of self-support and ingenuity in running and sustaining their businesses, the paper concludes by calling for a more supportive institutional framework in order to propel the businesses of young people into the future.
History
Department
- Geography and Environment
Published in
FuturesVolume
135Publisher
Elsevier BVVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Rights holder
© ElsevierPublisher statement
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Futures and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.futures.2019.102487.Acceptance date
2019-11-12Publication date
2019-11-14Copyright date
2022ISSN
0016-3287Publisher version
Language
- en
Depositor
Prof Katherine Gough. Deposit date: 28 November 2019Article number
102487Usage metrics
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