An Insolvency Toolkit for SMEs in Emerging Economies—A Spotlight on Uganda
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Key Challenges for SMEs in Financial Distress in Uganda
2.1. Timely Filing/Commencement and Stigma Challenges
2.2. Time and Cost Constraints in the Insolvency Process
2.3. Creditor–Debtor Involvement and Protection
3. The Proposed Toolkit
3.1. Super-Priority Rescue Funding for SMEs
3.1.1. A Market-Based Approach?
3.1.2. A Regulatory Approach?
3.2. Streamlining the Role of IPs to Meet SME Demands
3.2.1. India: Creation of a Regulated Insolvency Profession
3.2.2. New Zealand
4. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Abe, Shinichiro, Shinnosuke Fukuoka, Yosuke Kanegae, and Zentaro Nihei. 2020. Jurisdictional Report: Myanmar. In Corporate Restructuring and Insolvency Law in Asia 2020. Singapore: Asian Business Law Institute, pp. 358–416. [Google Scholar]
- Abudu Sallam, Waiswa. 2023. Corporate Rescue: A worthwhile legal option for financially distressed companies. The Insolvency Journal of Uganda 1: 17–31. [Google Scholar]
- Adebola, Bolanle, Kayode Olude, and Sanford Mba. 2025. Comprehending and resolving the challenges of the Nigerian insolvency law in practice: The performance improvement approach. Journal of Corporate Law Studies 25: 145–83. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Adler, Barry, and George Triantis. 2017. Debt Priority and Options in Bankruptcy: A Policy Intervention. American Bankruptcy Law Journal 91: 563–5. [Google Scholar]
- Armour, John, Mahesh Uttamchandani Antonia Menezes, and Kristin Van Zwieten. 2015. How do creditor rights matter for debt finance? In Research Handbook on Secured Financing in Commercial Transactions. Edited by Frederique Dahan. London: Edward Elgar Publishing, pp. 3–25. [Google Scholar]
- Atkins, Scott. 2020. Jurisdictional Report: Myanmar. In Corporate Restructuring and Insolvency Law in Asia 2020. Singapore: Asian Business Law Institute, pp. 489–532. [Google Scholar]
- Ayotte, Kenneth, and David A. Skeel, Jr. 2013. Bankruptcy Law as a Liquidity Provider. The University of Chicago Law Review 80: 1557. [Google Scholar]
- Baird, Douglas, and Thomas Jackson. 1984. Corporate Reorganizations and the Treatment of Diverse Ownership Interests: A Comment on Adequate Protection of Secured Creditors in Bankruptcy. University of Chicago Law Review 51: 97–130. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bankruptcy Law Reforms Committee. 2015. The report of the Bankruptcy Law Reforms Committee Volume I: Rationale and Design. Available online: http://ibbi.gov.in/BLRCReportVol1_04112015.pdf (accessed on 9 November 2025).
- Bergthaler, Wolfgang, Kenneth Kang, Yan Liu, and Dermot Monaghan. 2015. Tackling Small and Medium Sized Enterprise Problem Loans in Europe. IMF Staff Discussion Note. Available online: https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/sdn/2015/sdn1504.pdf (accessed on 30 November 2025).
- Brown, David, David Vance, and Jeff Hart. 2017. Insolvency Practitioners. In Heath and Whale on Insolvency. Edited by Paul Heath and Mike J. Whales. New Zealand: LexisNexis. [Google Scholar]
- Campbell, David. 2018. The ‘Market’ in the Theory of Regulation. Social and Legal Studies 27: 545–7. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cork, Sir Kenneth. 1982. Insolvency Law and Practice: Report of the Review Committee. London: H.M.S.O. [Google Scholar]
- Crane, Frederik. 2020. Why MSMEs are failing: Evidence from the real world. Journal of the International Council for Small Business 1: 139–40. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ellina, Sophia. 2025. (Re)considering the position of corporate rescue finance for distressed companies under English insolvency law. Journal of Business Law 5: 374–98. [Google Scholar]
- Enterprise Bankruptcy Law of the Peoples Republic of China (EBL). 2006. Available online: https://english.www.gov.cn/services/doingbusiness/202102/24/content_WS6035f009c6d0719374af97ad.html (accessed on 9 November 2025).
- Esso, Loesse Jacques. 2010. Re-examining the Finance-Growth Nexus: Structural Break, Threshold Cointegration and Causality Evidence from the ECOWAS. Journal of Economic Development 35: 57–79. [Google Scholar]
- Ghio, Emilie, and Donald Thomson. 2023. Is insolvency stigmatised? International Insolvency Review 32: 397–99. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ghio, Emilie, and Donald Thomson. 2025. Insolvency: More than just numbers. International Company and Commercial Law Review 36: 23–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gurrea-Martínez, Aurelio. 2021. Implementing an insolvency framework for micro and small firms. International Insolvency Review 30: 46–66. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gurrea-Martínez, Aurelio. 2023. Debtor-in-Possession Financing in Reorganisation Procedures: Regulatory Models and Proposals for Reform. European Business Organization Law Review 24: 555–7. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Halliday, Terrence, and Bruce Carruthers. 2009. Bankrupt: Global Lawmaking and Systemic Financial Crisis. Stanford: Stanford University Press, pp. 365–6. [Google Scholar]
- Howell, Nicola, and Rosalind Mason. 2015. Reinforcing Stigma or Delivering a Fresh Start: Bankruptcy and Future Engagement in the Workforce. University of New South Wales Law Journal 38: 1529–74. [Google Scholar]
- Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India. 2016. Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (Insolvency Professionals) Regulations. Available online: http://ibbi.gov.in/webadmin/pdf/legalframwork/2018/Apr/word%20copy%20Updated%20upto%2001.04.2018%20IP%20REGULATIONS_2018-04-11%2016:15:54.pdf (accessed on 12 November 2025).
- Jackson, Thomas H. 1986. The Logic and Limits of Bankruptcy Law. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, chap. 1. [Google Scholar]
- Kainobwisho, Mercy. 2024. The Insolvency (Amendment) Act 20 of 2022 on the evolution of Uganda’s modern insolvency jurisprudence. The Insolvency Journal of Uganda 2: 4–12. [Google Scholar]
- Kashaija, Emmanuel. 2023. Corporate rescue and restructuring in Uganda: Is it justifiable to stakeholders in insolvency? The Insolvency Journal of Uganda 1: 8–16. [Google Scholar]
- Kavitha, Dinesh. 2022. A panacea for small firm insolvencies? A critical review of the pre-pack scheme launched in India. International Journal of Law and Management 64: 389–402. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kayongo, Paul Mark. 2024. Capital for entrepreneurial success: An analysis of its awareness and leveraging amongst entrepreneurs in Uganda. The Insolvency Journal of Uganda 1: 45–66. [Google Scholar]
- Keay, Andrew, and Peter Walton. 2024. Insolvency Law: Corporate and Personal. London: LexisNexis. [Google Scholar]
- Kelch, Thomas G. 1991. The Phantom Fiduciary: The Debtor in Possession in Chapter 11. Wayne Law Review 38: 1323–9. [Google Scholar]
- Konde, Nasser. 2023. Corporate rescue of businesses in Uganda: Lessons from the Corona virus pandemic. The Insolvency Journal of Uganda 1: 32–41. [Google Scholar]
- Kucher, Alexander, Stefan Mayr, Christine Mitter, Christine Duller, and Birgitfeldbauer Durstmuller. 2020. Firm age dynamics and causes of corporate bankruptcy: Age dependent explanations for business failure. Review of Managerial Science 14: 633–61. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kumar, Dhananjay, and Gautam Sundaresh. 2018. Insolvency Professionals Under India’s New Insolvency Regime. Emerging Markets Restructuring Journal 8: 1–8. [Google Scholar]
- Laeven, Luc, Ross Levine, Thorsten Beck, and Asli Demirguc-Kunt. 2008. Finance, Firm Size and Growth. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking 40: 1380–2. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Langford, Rosemary, and Ian Ramsay. 2021. The Contours and Content of the Creditors Interests Duty. Journal of Corporate Law Studies 21: 85–9. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lochmiller, Chad. 2021. Conducting Thematic Analysis with Qualitative Data. The Qualitative Report 26: 2029–31. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lu, Lerong. 2018. Solving the SME financing puzzle in the UK: Has online P2P lending got the Midas touch? Journal of International Banking Law and Regulation 33: 449–60. [Google Scholar]
- Martin, Nathalie. 2003. Common-Law Bankruptcy Systems: Similarities and Differences. American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review 11: 367–8. [Google Scholar]
- McCormack, Gerard. 2007. Super-priority New Financing and Corporate Rescue. Journal of Business Law 7: 701–28. [Google Scholar]
- Ministry of Trade, Industry and Cooperative. 2024. The state of entrepreneurship in Uganda 2024: Profile of Uganda’s Micro Small and Medium Enterprises. Available online: https://www.mtic.go.ug/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/MSME-profile.pdf (accessed on 9 November 2025).
- Mokal, Riz, Ronald Davis, Alberto Mazzoni, Irit Mevorach, Madam Justice Barbara Romaine, Janis Sarra, Ignacio Tirado, and Stephan Madaus. 2018. Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprise Insolvency: A Modular Approach. Oxford: Oxford University Press, chap. 3–6. [Google Scholar]
- Mokal, Rizwaan. 2005. Corporate Insolvency Law, Theory and Application. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 92–132. [Google Scholar]
- Moser, Albine, and Irene Korstjens. 2018. Series: Practical Guidance to Qualitative Research. Part 3: Sampling, Data Collection and Analysis. European Journal of General Practice 24: 9–11. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Mrockova, Natalie. 2021. Corporate Bankruptcy Law in China. London: Hart Publishing, chap. 4. [Google Scholar]
- Mrockova, Natalie. 2022. Resolving SME insolvencies: An analysis of new Chinese rules. Journal of Corporate Law Studies 22: 469–503. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Nsubuga, Hamiisi. 2021. Reinvigorating corporate rescue in emerging economies—A Ugandan perspective. Insolvency Intelligence 34: 95–102. [Google Scholar]
- Nsubuga, Hamiisi. 2022. The Debtor-in-Possession Model in the EU Insolvency and Restructuring Framework—A Domino Effect? Journal of Business Law 3: 238–51. [Google Scholar]
- Nyombi, Crispas. 2018. The Objectives of Corporate Insolvency Law: Lessons for Uganda. International Journal of Law and Management 60: 2–18. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Osekenye, Joel. 2023. Contemporary changes in Uganda’s insolvency practice: Lessons. The Insolvency Journal of Uganda 1: 60–8. [Google Scholar]
- Parry, Rebecca. 2008. Corporate Rescue. London: Sweet & Maxwell, p. 13. [Google Scholar]
- Paterson, Sarah. 2017. Debt restructuring and notions of fairness. Modern Law Review 80: 600–23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Paterson, Sarah. 2018. Finding our way: Secured transactions and corporate bankruptcy law and policy in America and England. Journal of Corporate Law Studies 18: 247–54. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Payne, Jennifer. 2014. Debt Restructuring in English Law: Lessons from the United States and the Need for Reform. Law Quarterly Review 130: 282–6. [Google Scholar]
- Payne, Jennifer. 2022. Debt restructuring outside formal insolvency proceedings. In The Anatomy of Insolvency Law. Edited by Reinhard Bork and Renato Mangano. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Payne, Jennifer, and Janis Sarra. 2018. Tripping the Light Fantastic: A comparative analysis of the European Commission’s proposals for new and interim financing of insolvent businesses. International Insolvency Review 2: 178–200. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Phelan, Robin, and Ocean Tama. 2011. The use of DIP financing as a mechanism to control the corporate restructuring process. Texas Journal of Business Law 44: 15–27. [Google Scholar]
- Poggie, John, Jr. 1972. Toward Quality Control in Key Informant Data. Human Organization 31: 23–4. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Prochniak, Mariusz, and Katarzyna Wasiak. 2017. The Impact of Financial Systems on Economic Growth in the Context of the Global Crisis: Empirical Evidence for the EU and OECD Countries. Empirica 44: 295–337. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rasmussen, Robert K. 1998. Behavioral Economics, the Economic Analysis of Bankruptcy Law and the Pricing of Credit. Vanderbilt Law Review 51: 1679–83. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Sandrasegara, Manoj Pillay, and Sim Kwan Kiat. 2020. Jurisdictional Report: Myanmar. In Corporate Restructuring and Insolvency Law in Asia 2020. Singapore: Asian Business Law Institute, pp. 587–666. [Google Scholar]
- Skeel, David A., Jr. 2004. The Past, Present, and Future of Debtor-in-Possession Financing. Cardozo Law Review 25: 1905–7. [Google Scholar]
- Sousa, Michael D. 2013. Bankruptcy Stigma: A Socio-Legal Study. American Bankruptcy Law Journal 87: 435–82. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tajti, Tibor. 2018. Bankruptcy Stigma and the Second Chance Policy: The Impact of Bankruptcy Stigma on Business Restructurings in China, Europe and the United States. China-EU Law Journal 6: 1–29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- The World Bank. 2017. Report on the Treatment of MSME Insolvency. Available online: https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/973331494264489956 (accessed on 30 November 2025).
- The World Bank. 2020. Capital Markets and SMEs in Emerging Markets and Developing Economies: Can They Go the Distance? Available online: https://documents1.worldbank.org/curated/en/270221582271669731/pdf/Capital-Markets-and-SMEs-in-Emerging-Markets-and-Developing-Economies-Can-They-Go-the-Distance.pdf (accessed on 20 October 2025).
- Tirole, Jean. 2006. The Theory of Corporate Finance. Princeton: Princeton University Press, pp. 389–95. [Google Scholar]
- Tremblay, Marc-Adélard. 1957. The Key Informant Technique: A Non-ethnographic Application. American Anthropologist 59: 688–90. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Triantis, George. 1993. A Theory of the Regulation of Debtor-in-Possession Financing. Vanderbilt Law Review 46: 901–4. [Google Scholar]
- Tsioli, Lydia. 2023. Rescue financing under a viability spotlight. Journal of Corporate Law Studies 23: 843–85. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tsioli, Lydia. 2025. Viability in Corporate Debt Restructuring Law. London: Edward Elgar, chap. 3 and 4. [Google Scholar]
- Tufano, Peter. 1997. Business Failure, Judicial Innovation, and Financial Innovation: Restructuring U.S. Railroads in the Nineteenth Century. Business History Review 71: 1–3. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- UNCITRAL. 2021. Legislative Recommendations on Insolvency of Micro and Small Enterprises. Available online: https://uncitral.un.org/en/lrimse (accessed on 30 November 2025).
- United Nations Capital Development Fund. 2020. Uganda Business Impact Survey 2020: Impact of COVID-19 on Formal Sector Small and Medium Enterprises. Available online: https://www.uncdf.org/article/5634/uganda-business-impact-survey-2020#:~:text=In%20April%202020%2C%20UNCDF%20in%20collaboration%20with%20Makerere,on%20the%20private%20sector%20and%20accelerate%20economic%20recovery (accessed on 11 October 2025).
- Van Zwieten, Kristin. 2020. Disciplining the Directors of an Insolvent Company. Insolvency Intelligence 33: 2–10. [Google Scholar]
- Wanyina, Bwayo Richard. 2023. Voluntary liquidation, an insolvency practitioner’s return. The Insolvency Journal of Uganda 1: 97–101. [Google Scholar]
| 1 | Small Business Reorganization Act of 2019, Pub. L. No. 116-54, 133 Stat. 1079 (23 August 2019). |
| 2 | In China’s case, as The Enterprise Bankruptcy Law 2006 (EBL 2006) did not have provisions specifically targeted at resolving SME insolvencies, additional separate rules were introduced to apply alongside the EBL 2006 in 2018 and 2020 respectively, thereby introducing simplified insolvency law and rules for SMEs. See further; Mrockova (2021, 2022). However, although less intrusive, this option is not advanced for Uganda in this article as it may not fit in well in the current legal structure, especially the court system, preferring a special SME insolvency framework that the article advocates. |
| 3 | Efficiency is used in this context to refer to the desire for effective use of the regulatory framework (including legal tools, procedures, rules, etc.) to achieve the desired and/or intended objectives, such as maximising value. |
| 4 | However, please note that different socio-economic contexts may mean that not all SMEs would be impacted with the same level of severity of financial distress and therefore, rescue objectives may differ accordingly. |
| 5 | Amounting to approximately 90 percent of the entire private sector. See United Nations Capital Development Fund (2020). |
| 6 | This choice is also driven by the fact that some of the literature and data used in this article were collected/researched as part of the author’s research projected awarded by the British Academy/Leverhulme Small Research Grant—SRG2324\241654—Devising an insolvency toolkit to enhance SME rescue and sustainability in Uganda’s business sector. |
| 7 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), ss. 139–161. |
| 8 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), ss. 140–162. |
| 9 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), ss. 125–137. |
| 10 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), ss. 180–197. |
| 11 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), ss. 56–124. |
| 12 | The Insolvency Practitioners Regulations 2017 (Uganda). |
| 13 | Companies Act 2012 (Uganda), s. 234. |
| 14 | Companies Act 2012 (Uganda), ss. 236–245. |
| 15 | Companies Act 2012 (Uganda), ss. 268–272. |
| 16 | The authors in this published work advocate for a modular approach to MSME insolvencies. However, although the modular approach seeks to prescribe avenues to solving MSME insolvencies, it is a distinct approach from the ideal of a special regime for SME insolvencies in Uganda that my article advances, especially drawing on local and contextual challenges in Uganda’s business and financial sectors with fragmented regulatory frameworks. |
| 17 | Ghio also acknowledges that despite years of reform, the European Union (EU) insolvency law framework is still structurally and behaviourally inaccessible to micro-, small-, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs). This reaffirms the concern that legal and policymaking on MSME insolvency is curiously underdeveloped and systemically overlooked as priority is directed towards larger, well-resourced firms. |
| 18 | Although some of these challenges also impact larger corporations, they impact SMEs more adversely than large corporations. |
| 19 | Insolvency (Amendment) Act 2022 (Uganda). |
| 20 | Further information available online: https://ursb.go.ug/ (accessed on 28 October 2025). |
| 21 | BTI 2014 LLC v Sequana [2023] UKSC B.C.C 32, 11, 165, 176. per Reed LJ and Briggs LJ. |
| 22 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), ss. 138–161. |
| 23 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), ss. 162–174. |
| 24 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), s. 162. |
| 25 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), s. 145(1)(a). |
| 26 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), s. 148. |
| 27 | Companies Act 2012 (Uganda), ss. 234–236. |
| 28 | Companies Act 2012 (Uganda), s. 234(2). |
| 29 | See generally, Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), ss140–162; Companies Act 2012 (Uganda), s. 234. |
| 30 | Companies Act 2012 (Uganda), ss. 230–234. |
| 31 | Companies Act 2012 (Uganda), ss. 230. |
| 32 | Companies Act 2012 (Uganda), ss. 230–242. |
| 33 | Although sometimes the lack of engagement by SME creditors may indicate trust in the procedure, this is not the case in Uganda as this is driven by recovery considerations. |
| 34 | The term viability may be used to refer to either the “economic” or “financial” status of an entity. While economic viability refers to the comparison between the debtor’s going-concern and liquidation value, financial viability refers to either the solvent or insolvent status of the entity. However, an entity may be deemed insolvent or imminently insolvent based on a cash-flow or balance sheet basis or when still technically solvent but facing a reasonable likelihood of insolvency. On the other hand, financial viability can also be construed as an aim of a corporate debt restructuring procedure or as a necessary precondition to achieving the desired financial status of the entity. See further (Tsioli 2023, 2025). |
| 35 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), s. 164A. |
| 36 | See note 8 above. |
| 37 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), s. 139 (4); s. 164. |
| 38 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), ss. 175–197. |
| 39 | The Insolvency Practitioners Regulations (Uganda) 2017. |
| 40 | Insolvency Act 2011 (Uganda), s. 19A. |
| 41 | Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 (India). |
| 42 | Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 (India), s. 2(19). |
| 43 | For the IBBI and its mandate, see https://ibbi.gov.in/en (accessed on 12 October 2025). |
| 44 | Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 (India), s. 196(1). |
| 45 | For a full list of the powers and functions of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India, see https://ibbi.gov.in/en/about/powers-functions (accessed on 28 October 2025). |
| 46 | Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 (India), s. 220. |
| 47 | Further information on disciplinary committee available online: https://ibbi.gov.in/en/about/disciplinary-committee (accessed on 16 October 2025). |
| 48 | Restructuring Insolvency and Turnaround Association of New Zealand (RITANZ). Further information available online: https://www.ritanz.org.nz/ (accessed on 12 October 2025). |
| 49 | Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand (CAANZ). Further information available online: https://www.charteredaccountantsanz.com/ (accessed on 12 October 2025). |
| 50 | Insolvency Practitioners Regulation Act 2019 (NZ). |
| 51 | Insolvency Practitioner Regulation Act 2019 (NZ) s. 9(2). |
| 52 | Insolvency Practitioner Regulation Act 2019 (NZ) s. 5. |
| 53 | See Grant v RITANZ [2020] NZHC 2876, 13. |
| 54 | Grant v Restructuring Insolvency & Turnaround Association New Zealand Inc (RITANZ) [2020] NZHC 2876. |
| 55 | Insolvency Practitioners Regulation Act 2019 (NZ), s. 60. |
| 56 | RITANZ, Principle 5.1. |
| 57 | RITANZ, Principle 5.2. |
| 58 | RITANZ, Principle 9.1. |
| 59 | RITANZ, Principle 9.2. |
| 60 | RITANZ, Principle 6.7. |
| 61 | RITANZ, Principle 7. |





Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2026 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.
Share and Cite
Nsubuga, H. An Insolvency Toolkit for SMEs in Emerging Economies—A Spotlight on Uganda. Laws 2026, 15, 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws15010008
Nsubuga H. An Insolvency Toolkit for SMEs in Emerging Economies—A Spotlight on Uganda. Laws. 2026; 15(1):8. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws15010008
Chicago/Turabian StyleNsubuga, Hamiisi. 2026. "An Insolvency Toolkit for SMEs in Emerging Economies—A Spotlight on Uganda" Laws 15, no. 1: 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws15010008
APA StyleNsubuga, H. (2026). An Insolvency Toolkit for SMEs in Emerging Economies—A Spotlight on Uganda. Laws, 15(1), 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws15010008

