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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Institutional support and women’s entrepreneurial self-efficacy

Tomoyo Kazumi, +1 more
- Vol. 11, Iss: 3, pp 345-365
TLDR
The authors explored the extent to which local institutional forces affect female entrepreneurial venture performance and found that perceived social legitimacy may lead to increased entrepreneurial self-efficacy, thereby enhancing venture performance, which can clarify the institutional force pathways to foster entrepreneurial confidence.
Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this study is to explores the extent to which local institutional forces affect female entrepreneurial venture performance. Drawing upon a unified theoretical framework of social cognitive and institutional perspectives, the authors scrutinize the complex interplay among institutional support, entrepreneurial cognitions and entrepreneurial success. Design/methodology/approach Based on a unique sample of 202 female entrepreneurs in 30 provinces throughout Japan, this paper grounded social cognitive theory and attempted to clear the relation between women’s entrepreneurial self-efficacy and venture performance empirically by statistical analysis. Findings The findings of structural equation modeling indicate that women’s entrepreneurial self-efficacy is a strong and useful mediator of the effect of informal institutional support on venture performance. Unexpectedly, formal institutional support shows no correlation with entrepreneurial self-efficacy. Practical implications This study proposes that perceived social legitimacy may lead to increased entrepreneurial self-efficacy, thereby enhancing venture performance. This finding can clarify the institutional force pathways to foster entrepreneurial confidence. Originality/value This study contributes to the field of female entrepreneurship by examining institutional antecedents of women’s entrepreneurial self-efficacy. Focused on the case of Japanese female entrepreneurs, this study is unique and valuable.

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Citations
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Perceived public support and entrepreneurship attitudes: A little reciprocity can go a long way!

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the link between perceived public support for entrepreneurship and individuals' entrepreneurial intention using samples from the US and Poland, and found that positive perception of public support is indirectly related to entrepreneurial intentions of university students.
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The link between women entrepreneurship, innovation and stakeholder engagement: A review

TL;DR: In this article, a conceptual framework involving proactive, interactive two-way stakeholder engagement process between women enterprises and stakeholders, divided into three interconnected parts, along with institutional support, is suggested.
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Entrepreneurship Education and Students’ Entrepreneurial Intention in Higher Education

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper found that entrepreneurship education has a positive effect on entrepreneurial intention and that self-efficacy of entrepreneurial decision-making played a mediating role between entrepreneurship education and student entrepreneurial intention.
References
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