TY - JOUR
T1 - Dismantling the market of privilege: An international framework for inclusive entrepreneurship education in Africa
AU - Bvochora, Susan Martha Dambudzo
AU - Galavotti, Ilaria
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Purpose: This study examines how inclusive entrepreneurship education programs can challenge the entrenched “market of privilege”, with a focus on the E4 Impact Global MBA program in Africa. This study also aims at identifying pedagogical strategies that differentiate inclusive programs from traditional business education.\r\nDesign/methodology/approach: The research employs a qualitative methodology, utilising semi-structured interviews with 50 participants across diverse roles (administrators, students, lecturers, mentors) and geographies (Ghana, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Mozambique, Kenya, Tunisia, and Sierra Leone). The Gioia methodology framework guided the data analysis within an integrated theoretical framework that combined Social Cognitive Career Theory, Critical Pedagogy, and Network Theory.\r\nFindings: The E4Impact GMBA enhances access for underrepresented groups, particularly women, by cultivating non-traditional skills and perspectives. These competencies are practised through mentorship, peer collaboration, and contextually relevant curricula, enabling participants to navigate systemic and gendered barriers and align their ventures with the Sustainable Development Goals. However, persistent challenges risk reproducing conditional inclusion and sustaining elements of the privileged market.\r\nOriginality: This paper advances a cross-fertilisation of Social Cognitive Career Theory, Critical Pedagogy, and Network Theory to reconceptualise inclusion as a dynamic, recursive process. Conceptually, it introduces the Inclusive Entrepreneurship Higher Education Framework, a scalable model for dismantling markets of privilege in resource-constrained contexts. Simultaneously, it also provides recommendations for policymakers, educators, and program designers to promote gender equity and social impact, while ensuring long-term accessibility, scalability, and accountability in entrepreneurship education.
AB - Purpose: This study examines how inclusive entrepreneurship education programs can challenge the entrenched “market of privilege”, with a focus on the E4 Impact Global MBA program in Africa. This study also aims at identifying pedagogical strategies that differentiate inclusive programs from traditional business education.\r\nDesign/methodology/approach: The research employs a qualitative methodology, utilising semi-structured interviews with 50 participants across diverse roles (administrators, students, lecturers, mentors) and geographies (Ghana, Rwanda, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Mozambique, Kenya, Tunisia, and Sierra Leone). The Gioia methodology framework guided the data analysis within an integrated theoretical framework that combined Social Cognitive Career Theory, Critical Pedagogy, and Network Theory.\r\nFindings: The E4Impact GMBA enhances access for underrepresented groups, particularly women, by cultivating non-traditional skills and perspectives. These competencies are practised through mentorship, peer collaboration, and contextually relevant curricula, enabling participants to navigate systemic and gendered barriers and align their ventures with the Sustainable Development Goals. However, persistent challenges risk reproducing conditional inclusion and sustaining elements of the privileged market.\r\nOriginality: This paper advances a cross-fertilisation of Social Cognitive Career Theory, Critical Pedagogy, and Network Theory to reconceptualise inclusion as a dynamic, recursive process. Conceptually, it introduces the Inclusive Entrepreneurship Higher Education Framework, a scalable model for dismantling markets of privilege in resource-constrained contexts. Simultaneously, it also provides recommendations for policymakers, educators, and program designers to promote gender equity and social impact, while ensuring long-term accessibility, scalability, and accountability in entrepreneurship education.
KW - Inclusive Education
KW - Mentorship
KW - Entrepreneurship
KW - Gender Equity
KW - Sustainable Development
KW - Inclusive Education
KW - Mentorship
KW - Entrepreneurship
KW - Gender Equity
KW - Sustainable Development
UR - https://publicatt.unicatt.it/handle/10807/323956
U2 - 10.1108/EDI-01-2025-0037
DO - 10.1108/EDI-01-2025-0037
M3 - Article
SN - 2040-7149
SP - 1
EP - 52
JO - Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
JF - Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
IS - N/A
ER -