Immigrant Effect and Collective Entrepreneurship - The Creation and Development of a Turkish Entrepreneurial Group




Maria Elo

PublisherGESIS LEIBNIZ INST SOCIAL SCIENCES

2019

Historical Social Research

HISTORICAL SOCIAL RESEARCH-HISTORISCHE SOZIALFORSCHUNG

HIST SOC RES

44

4

129

161

33

0172-6404

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.12759/hsr.44.2019.4.129-161

https://www.gesis.org/hsr/abstr/44-4/05elo-1



This study addresses multifaceted business development via collective entrepreneurship in a return migration setting. Instead of focusing on the necessity lens on how migrants adapt economically and develop livelihoods, this study addresses migrant success and the outcome of migratory paths and learnings in entrepreneurial strategy. This single case study examines a Turkish migrant family in Germany and, in particular, the second-generation returnee to Turkey, and his venturing and resulting entrepreneurial and business groups. Returnees are known to invest in housing and local venturing, if they do not return as pensioners, but very little is known about the business strategies that transnational migrants introduce in the 'home' context and their success factors, even less on adolescent returnees' development. Thus, this study examines the interconnection of the migrantness, the entrepreneurial development, and the transfer of knowledge and ideas (i.e., immigrant effect) in business growth. It contributes to the research literature on returnees and transnational diaspora and, in particular, extends our understanding on the immigrant effect on collaboration and alliance building.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 23:40