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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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Institutional entrepreneur strategies in emerging economies: Creating market exclusivity for the rising affluent

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study how institutional entrepreneurs strategize to legitimate market exclusivity for the rising affluent in emerging economies and propose that pluralistic logics and logic contradictions can trigger novel institutional spaces that are leveraged by institutional entrepreneurs to promote new organizational forms.
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Enterprising the rural: creating a social value chain.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore how a social enterprise in Kenya, Farmstore, addresses problems associated with rural poverty and demonstrate how organizing different stakeholder's interests and abilities enables entrepreneurship, allowing poor farmers access to technical advances.
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Business Incubators as International Knowledge Intermediaries: Exploring their role in the internationalization of start-ups from an emerging market

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate how business incubators facilitate the international growth of start-up clients originating from emerging markets by creating international linkages between the networks of knowledge creation and knowledge application.
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Supply chain corruption practices circumventing sustainability standards: wolves in sheep's clothing

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors proposed a typology of supply chain corruption practices, further explored the symbolic adoption of sustainability standards in supply chains and proposed the novel construct of social isomorphism for corruption.