Chapter 1: Introduction.- Section I: Context.- Chapter 2: Cameroon: Characteristics of entrepreneurs and SMME performance.- Chapter 3: Crowdfunding in the African context: A new way to fund ventures.- Chapter 4: The lack of business dispute resolutions in East Africa: An unresolved impediment to SME development?.- Section II: Challenges.- Chapter 5: Microfinance organizations in Africa: The challenge of transforming into regulated institutions.- Chapter 6: Enhancing organizational citizenship behavior: The role of employee empowerment, trust and engagement.- Chapter 7: The challenge of developing a sustainable hybrid organization: the case of GreenPop.- Chapter 8: The challenge of becoming a successful entrepreneur in a hostile context: The example of Mohamed Ibrahim, the founder of MSI and Celtel.- Section III: Cases.- Chapter 9: The case of Rwanda as a developmental state.- Chapter 10: Artisanal mining in Rwanda: The trade-off between entrepreneurial activity and environmental impact.- Chapter 11: Tourism as emerging industry in Rwanda: The role of training and development for the hotel sector.- Chapter 12: Privatization of firms in Rwanda: The role of corporate governance practices.- Section IV: Commentary.- Chapter 13: Entrepreneurship and SME Management Across Africa: A perspective and a short review.
Dr. Leona Achtenhagen is Professor of Entrepreneurship and Business Development at Jönköping International Business School in Sweden. She has conducted a number of different research projects on aspects of entrepreneurship and SME management in underprivileged contexts. Her research results on those topics have been published as numerous book chapters and articles in leading journals such as Entrepreneurship & Regional Development, Entrepreneurship: Theory & Practice and Long Range Planning.
Ethel Brundin is Ph.D. and Professor in Entrepreneurship and Business Development at Jönköping International Business School, Sweden. She has been the project manager of three longitudinal research projects in South Africa, targeted towards previously disadvantaged groups, such as Blacks and Coloureds. Her research has been well received by policy makers on BBBEE (Broad Based Black Economic Empowerment) and is published in journals such as Journal of Developmental Entrepreneurship, International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business and The International Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic and Social Sustainability. She has also published book chapters and journal articles, e.g. in Journal of Business Venturing. She has brought the world wide STEP (Successful Transgenerational Entrepreneurship Practices) to Africa with its base in South Africa.
This book focuses on issues related to entrepreneurship and SME management on the African continent by providing insights from different conceptual, empirical and case studies. In doing so, it focuses on context-specific challenges for conducting entrepreneurial activities or business endeavors in smaller firms in the African continent. The book responds to calls for more research about African businesses given the acknowledgement of scholars, students and policy makers around the world who realize the increasing and growing economic importance of the African continent. In addition to serving as a source book for more in-depth studies by assisting the reader in gaining increased understanding of the topics covered, complementing the different parts with reviews, the book also elaborates on issues such political unrest, corruption, untrained personnel and environmental concerns. Entrepreneurship and SME Management Across Africa: Context, Challenges, Cases will be useful to academics with an interest in different entrepreneurial contexts in general, and Africa in particular, and for students interested in regional business practices, as well as for practitioners and policy makers.