Resilience and entrepreneurship: a systematic review [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]
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F1000 Research
Abstract
Background: The concept of resilience runs through an array of
disciplines, consisting of engineering, public health, ecology,
psychology, sociology, disaster management, and business
administration. Researchers have tries to explain the relationship
amongst connected ideas such as resiliency, adaptability,
transformability, and vulnerability but their varied definitions and
differences between them remain fuzzy. There are two reasons why
resilience theory is important in entrepreneurship. Firstly, researchers
generally employ the term resilience to mean consciousness,
determination, perseverance, or self-value to justify why some
entrepreneurs and their firms achieve better results than their non resilient counterparts. Secondly, there are cognitive and behavioral
entrepreneurial traits that strengthen a firm’s capability to adapt to
varying conditions.
The aim of this study is to review the literature that intercepts
resilience and entrepreneurship. The study will attempt to identify
scholarly conversations to construct notions of resilience and
entrepreneurship. Therefore, limitations in the current literature will
be examined and directions for future studies would be highlighted.
Methods: This paper adopted a systematic interdisciplinary review of
relevant studies that is patterned using the Preferred Reporting Items
for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA).
Results: The scholarly works selected from the literature portrayed six
emerging colloquies or research tributaries that intercept
entrepreneurship and resilience:
• Resilience as a function of entrepreneurial individuals or firms,
• Resilience generating entrepreneurial intentions,
Entrepreneurial behavior boosting organizational resilience
and,
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• Resilience in the framework of entrepreneurial failure,
• Entrepreneurship and culture,
• Resilience as a process of recovery and transformation.
Conclusions: This study serves as a backdrop for the emergence of
more nuanced debates on the relationship that exists between
different streams of conversations on resilience. In addition, this
paper shows how entrepreneurs contribute towards promoting a
constructively sustainable means for socio-economic development.
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Research Article
