The liability of refugeeness: Leveraging multiple identities to enact power in a context of displacement
研究乌克兰女性难民创业者如何在英国和罗马尼亚的流离失所背景下,通过母亲、难民、乌克兰人和创业者等多重身份行使权力,揭示其日常创业经历。
This article leverages the Jo Rowlands’ typology of power and Crenshaw’s intersectionality to engage in interpretative phenomenological analysis of Ukrainian women refugee entrepreneurs. In this study, we ask: ‘How do Ukrainian women refugee entrepreneurs experience their identities as mothers, refugees, Ukrainians, and entrepreneurs in a context of displacement in the UK and Romania?’ Drawing on interviews and field notes, we expose the lived experiences of 13 women refugee entrepreneurs and reveal how they navigate their intersectional identities by enacting their agency through different forms of power. In doing so, our study aligns with this Special Issue call for understanding ‘everyday refugee entrepreneurship’ in under-researched constraint contexts thus, contributing to refugee entrepreneurship research and policy.