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Building Inclusive Markets in Rural Bangladesh : How Intermediaries Work Institutional Voids

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TLDR
In this article, the authors uncover institutional voids as the source of market exclusion and identify two sets of activities: redefining market architecture and legitimizing new actors as critical for building "inclusive" markets.
Abstract
Much effort goes into building markets as a tool for economic and social development, often overlooking that in too many places social exclusion and poverty prevent many, especially women, from participating in and accessing markets. Building on data from rural Bangladesh and analyzing the work of a prominent intermediary organization, we uncover institutional voids as the source of market exclusion and identify two sets of activities – redefining market architecture and legitimating new actors – as critical for building ‘inclusive' markets. We expose voids as ‘analytical spaces' and illustrate how they result from conflict and contradiction among institutional ‘bits and pieces' from local political, community, and religious spheres. Our findings put forward a perspective on market building that highlights the ‘on the ground' dynamics and attends to the ‘institutions at play', to their consequences, and to a more diverse set of ‘inhabitants' of institutions.

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References
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Investigating inclusive entrepreneurial ecosystem through the lens of Bottom of the Pyramid (BOP) theory : case study of Taobao Village in China

TL;DR: Based on the Taobao ecosystem case study, this article developed a multi-layer framework to fill in the research gap and provide theoretical understanding on how to successfully form entrepreneurial ecosystem by practical investigation of entrepreneurial "habitat" at the bottom of the pyramid.

Global Strategies in the Legal Services Marketplace: Institutional Impacts on Value Chain Dynamics

Mari Sako
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the outsourcing and offshoring of legal services, known as legal process outsourcing (LPO), and show that legal services are being unbundled, with the KIM component being separated by ownership and geography from CAR and CRM components.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of local institutional profile on global value chain participation: An emerging market perspective

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of local institutional profile on GVC participation is investigated, taking the World Bank Enterprise Survey as the empirical sample, it is used an econometric method (propensity score matching technique) to test the relationship between local institutional profiles and GVC involvement.
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Scaling private health care for the base of the pyramid: Expanding versus broadening service offerings in developing nations

TL;DR: The case's core issue is whether or not Dr. Gronda should maintain SSer's current service portfolio but geographically expand the organization in order to reach a large number of remote BOP communities with primary health services, or if SSer should broaden its range of services to cover additional medical procedures offered in San Salvador.
Book ChapterDOI

Let’s Talk about Problems: Advancing Research on Hybrid Organizing, Social Enterprises, and Institutional Context

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce the social problem domain as an analytically useful and theoretically interesting meso-level to examine the role of context for hybrid organizing and to advance conversations on hybridity in organizational theory.