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Indigenous entrepreneurship in Aotearoa New Zealand

Author

Listed:
  • Merata Kawharu
  • Paul Tapsell
  • Christine Woods

Abstract

Purpose - Exploring the links between resilience, sustainability and entrepreneurship from an indigenous perspective means exploring the historic and socio-cultural context out of which a community originates. From this perspective, informed insight into a community’s ability to adapt and to transform without major structural collapse when confronted with exogenous challenges or crises can be gained. This paper explores the interplay between resilience and entrepreneurship in a New Zealand indigenous setting. Design/methodology/approach - The authors provide a theoretical and case study approach, exploring four intersecting leadership roles, their guiding value system and application at a micro kin family level through a tourism venture and at a macro kin tribal level through an urban land development venture. Findings - The findings demonstrate the importance of historical precedent and socio-cultural values in shaping the leadership matrix that addresses exogenous challenges and crises in an entrepreneurship context. Research limitations/implications - The research is limited to New Zealand, but the findings have synergies with other indigenous entrepreneurship elsewhere. Further cross-cultural research in this field includes examining the interplay between rights and duties within indigenous communities as contributing facets to indigenous resilience and entrepreneurship. Originality/value - This research is a contribution to theory and to indigenous community entrepreneurship in demonstrating what values and behaviours are assistive in confronting shocks, crises and challenges. Its originality is in the multi-disciplinary approach, combining economic and social anthropological, indigenous and non-indigenous perspectives. The originality of this paper also includes an analysis of contexts that appear to fall outside contemporary entrepreneurship, but are in fact directly linked.

Suggested Citation

  • Merata Kawharu & Paul Tapsell & Christine Woods, 2017. "Indigenous entrepreneurship in Aotearoa New Zealand," Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places in the Global Economy, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 11(1), pages 20-38, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:jecpps:jec-01-2015-0010
    DOI: 10.1108/JEC-01-2015-0010
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Horn, Christine & Gifford, Sandra M. & Ting, Christina Y.P., 2021. "Informal, essential and embedded: Transport strategies in remote Sarawak," Journal of Transport Geography, Elsevier, vol. 96(C).
    2. Antonio Luis Díaz-Aguilar & Javier Escalera-Reyes, 2020. "Family Relations and Socio-Ecological Resilience within Locally-Based Tourism: The Case of El Castillo (Nicaragua)," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 12(15), pages 1-26, July.
    3. Macpherson, Wayne G. & Tretiakov, Alexei & Mika, Jason P. & Felzensztein, Christian, 2021. "Indigenous entrepreneurship: Insights from Chile and New Zealand," Journal of Business Research, Elsevier, vol. 127(C), pages 77-84.

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