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Navigating hostility, pursuing hospitality: Conceptualising community engagement among migrant women entrepreneurs in peripheral areas

journal contribution
posted on 2024-12-09, 16:40 authored by Mahdieh ZeinaliMahdieh Zeinali, Agnieszka RydzikAgnieszka Rydzik, Gary BosworthGary Bosworth
<p dir="ltr">This article focuses on migrant women entrepreneurs’ engagement with local communities through creating hospitable spaces and explores how experiences of hospitality/hostility influence entrepreneurial activities and community engagement. Businesses, particularly in the service sector, often function as hubs of social interaction, providing opportunities for migrant entrepreneurs to engage with host communities in ways otherwise not readily available for non-entrepreneurs. These status-based opportunities for social exchange also come with risks and challenges, particularly in more peripheral areas that have traditionally attracted fewer migrants and are often perceived as less hospitable to newcomers. The study draws on twenty-one semi-structured interviews with migrant women entrepreneurs, analysing their approaches to community engagement to understand the constraints they encounter and the strategies they deploy to overcome hostility and create hospitable spaces. The findings are fourfold: (i) entrepreneurship can act as a vehicle for community engagement for migrant women seeking to identify and meet local needs; (ii) community engagement can strengthen migrant women’s business activities through improved access to networks and other resources; (iii) through active community engagement and responding to local needs, migrant women entrepreneurs become (re)makers of social infrastructure; and (iv) experiences of hospitality/hostility mediate migrant women’s entrepreneurial endeavours and community engagement. Conceptualising the ways in which migrant women use entrepreneurial activities to engage with local communities deepens understanding of migrant women’s approaches to overcoming hostility and creating more hospitable places and interactions.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (Research Outputs)
  • Lincoln Business School (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Hospitality & Society

Volume

15

Issue

1-2: Migration, (In)Hospitality and Belonging in Uncertain Times

Pages/Article Number

177 - 200

Publisher

Intellect

ISSN

2042-7913

eISSN

2042-7921

Date Accepted

2024-10-31

Date of First Publication

2026-03-31

Date of Final Publication

2026-03-31

Publisher statement

© Mahdieh Zeinali, Agnieszka Rydzik, Gary Bosworth, 2024. The definitive, peer reviewed and edited version of this article is published in Hospitality & Society, Volume 15, Issue 1-2: Migration, (In)Hospitality and Belonging in Uncertain Times, Mar 2025, p. 177 - 200. https://doi.org/10.1386/hosp_00092_1

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