Entrepreneurship and Kinship: An Integrative Review of a Nascent Domain
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Kinship relatedness: The inclusion of familial connections, encompassing both consanguineous and affinal relationships, involves individuals tied by shared genetics and marital bonds (Verver and Koning 2018). This sphere consists of one’s marriage partner, parents, offspring, and other kin such as siblings and extended relatives through marriage.
- Intimacy kinship: Relationships where everyone is honest to and trusting of the other; each cares for the other and seeks the other’s company (LaFollette 2017).
- Kinship reciprocity: A relationship among individuals or collectives wherein the supposition of receiving an equivalent return for something provided freely or through an obligation is surpassed by established duties to distribute resources and services in a generous and cooperative manner (Brady 1972).
- Fictive kinship: Relationships in which individuals are identified as fictive (pseudo and para) kinship are not connected through blood relations or marriage. Nonetheless, they perceive each other as family and utilize a conventional cultural classification (resembling blood relations, legal-contracted or marital ties, and parental roles) to characterize these relationships that are not based on kinship (Chatters et al. 1994).
2. Methodology
2.1. The PRISMA Guidelines
2.1.1. Data Identification
2.1.2. Data Screening
2.1.3. Eligibility Criteria
2.2. Data Analysis
3. Main Findings: The State of Kin-Entrepreneurship Research
3.1. Publication and Citation Trends
3.2. Top Publications on Entrepreneurship and Kinship
3.3. Top Publishing Sources for Entrepreneurship and Kinship
3.4. Top Nations Publishing Entrepreneurship and Kinship
4. Thematic and Content Analysis
4.1. Co-Occurrence Network
4.2. Thematic Evolution
4.3. Content Analysis
5. Discussions and Implications
5.1. Implications
5.2. Implications for Policy and Entrepreneurs
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The aggregate dependency ratio in developing nations is significantly high compared to that of developed economies. For instance, in 2020, the overall dependency ratio recorded in Africa was 78%, in contrast to 53.7% in America and 48% in Europe. Within Africa, the Central and Eastern regions exhibited the most pronounced dependency ratio at 100% when juxtaposed with other regions across the continent (Western: 86%, Northern: 61%, and Southern: 53%) (DESA 2020). |
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Search Query | Year Range | Subject Area | Document Type |
---|---|---|---|
TITLE-ABS-KEY (“kinship” AND “entrepreneurship”) AND PUBYEAR > 1985 AND PUBYEAR < 2024 AND (LIMIT-TO (SUBJAREA, “BUSI”) OR LIMIT-TO (SUBJAREA, “ECON”)) AND (LIMIT-TO (DOCTYPE, “ar”) OR LIMIT-TO (DOCTYPE, “re”)) | 1980–2023 | Economics, Econometrics and Finance, Business Management and Accounting, Multidisciplinary | Article, Review, Conference Paper |
Scopus Results | 76 | 36 | 29 |
TITLE-ABS-KEY (“kinship” AND “entrepreneur”) AND PUBYEAR > 1985 AND PUBYEAR < 2024 AND (LIMIT-TO (SUBJAREA, “ECON”) OR LIMIT-TO (SUBJAREA, “BUSI”) OR LIMIT-TO (SUBJAREA, “Undefined”)) AND (LIMIT-TO (DOCTYPE, “ar”) OR LIMIT-TO (DOCTYPE, “re”)) | 1980–2023 | Economics, Econometrics and Finance, Business Management and Accounting | Article, Review |
Scopus Results | 121 | 52 | 44 |
(TS = (“kinship”)) AND TS = (“entrepreneurship”) refined by publication years, web of science categories, document types | 1980–2023 | Business, Management, Economics, Business Finance, Family Studies, Multidisciplinary | Article, Proceeding Paper |
Web of Science Results | 80 | 47 | 46 |
(TS = (“kinship”)) AND TS = (“entrepreneur”) refined by publication years, web of science categories, document types | 1980–2023 | Business, Management, Economics, Area Studies, Multidisciplinary | Article |
Web of Science Results | 15 | 10 | 10 |
Total Search | 292 | 145 | 129 |
Article Title | Journal Title | Authors | Year | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kinship Networks and Entrepreneurs in China’s Transitional Economy | American Journal of Sociology | Peng | 2004 | 342 |
Informal Family Business in Africa | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | Khavul, Bruton and Wood | 2009 | 224 |
Resource Mobilization through Ethnic Networks: Kinship and Friendship Ties of Shopkeepers in England | Sociological Perspectives | Zimmer and Aldrich | 1987 | 162 |
Kinship and Business: How Entrepreneurial Households Facilitate Business Growth | Entrepreneurship & Regional Development | Alsos, Carter, and Ljunggren | 2014 | 133 |
Kinship in Entrepreneur Networks: Performance Effects of Resource Assembly in Africa | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | Khayesi, George, and Antonakis | 2014 | 88 |
Indigenous Entrepreneurship: An Emerging Field of Research | International Journal of Business and Globalisation | Dana | 2015 | 87 |
“We Don’t Deal with Courts”: Cooperation and Alternative Institutions Shaping Exporting Relationships of Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises in Ghana | International Small Business Journal: Researching Entrepreneurship | Amoako and Lyon | 2014 | 86 |
The Characteristics of Family Firms: Exploiting Information on Ownership, Kinship, and Governance Using Total Population Data | Small Business Economics | Andersson, Johansson, Karlsson, Lodefalk, and Poldahl | 2018 | 62 |
Entrepreneurial Workaround Practices in Severe Institutional Voids: Evidence from Kenya | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | Sydow, Cannatelli Giudici, and Molteni | 2022 | 38 |
Toward a Kinship Perspective on Entrepreneurship | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | Verver and Koning | 2018 | 27 |
Rank | Source | Documents | Citations | Average Citation | h-Index |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Entrepreneurship: theory and practice | 8 | 563 | 70.4 | 198 |
2 | Ethnic and racial studies | 2 | 275 | 137.5 | 118 |
3 | Entrepreneurship and regional development | 3 | 144 | 48 | 112 |
4 | Journal of small business and entrepreneurship | 2 | 103 | 51.5 | 40 |
5 | Small business economics | 3 | 102 | 34 | 167 |
6 | International journal of entrepreneurial behaviour & research | 3 | 74 | 24.7 | 91 |
7 | Journal of ethnic and migration studies | 2 | 39 | 19.5 | 117 |
8 | Journal of enterprising communities | 3 | 19 | 6.3 | 40 |
9 | Sustainability (Switzerland) | 2 | 17 | 8.5 | 169 |
10 | International journal of entrepreneurship and small business | 2 | 11 | 5.5 | 46 |
Country | Organization | Total Number of Documents | Percentage Documents | Cumulative Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Wisconsin—Whitewater; North Carolina State University; Illinois State University; Brown University and Nber | 52 | 27.66 | 27.66 |
United Kingdom | Strathclyde business school; Imperial College London, business school; Middlesex University; University of Manchester | 42 | 22.34 | 50 |
China | East China normal university; Peking university | 14 | 7.45 | 57.45 |
Germany | Heidelberg University; EU Business School | 10 | 5.32 | 62.77 |
Canada | St. Jerome’s University; University of Waterloo; University of Toronto; University of British Columbia | 9 | 4.79 | 67.56 |
Netherlands | Vrije University of Amsterdam | 8 | 4.26 | 71.82 |
France | Groupe sup de co Montpellier business school | 7 | 3.72 | 75.54 |
Italy | ESCP Business School; University of Turin | 7 | 3.72 | 79.26 |
New Zealand | Auckland University of Technology | 7 | 3.72 | 82.98 |
India | Indian Institute of Management Bangalore | 6 | 3.19 | 86.17 |
Australia | Australian National University; Macquarie University | 5 | 2.66 | 88.83 |
Sweden | Hui research, Stockholm, Orebro University School of Business | 5 | 2.66 | 91.49 |
Scotland | University of St Andrews | 4 | 2.13 | 93.62 |
Norway | Bodø graduate school of business; University of Norland | 3 | 1.6 | 95.22 |
Clusters | 1st Oder Concepts | Second Order Themes | Aggregate Dimension |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Kinship, trust, networks, family, embeddedness, social capital, ties, social networks, social structure | Kinship-Defining Attributes | Kinship-based business influencers |
2 | Entrepreneurship, entrepreneur, family firm, SMEs, Ethnic entrepreneurship, institutions, management, business | Entrepreneurial Ecosystem and Governance | |
3 | Business development, economic activity, informal sector, employment, rural economy, internationalisation, creativity and innovation, performance | Socioeconomic Influences | Entrepreneurial environment and consequences |
4 | Culture, religion, evolution, historical perspectives, context | Entrepreneurial Mindset and Orientation |
Year and Author | Kinship Defining Attributes | Entrepreneurial Ecosystem and Governance | Socioeconomic Influences | Entrepreneurial Mindset and Orientation | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kinship/Ties | Trust | Networks | Social Capital | Social Structure | Entrepreneurship | Family Firm | Ethnic Ventures | Management | Firm Development | Economic Activity | Informal Sector | Creativity/Innovation | Internationalisation | Culture | Religion | Historical Perspective | Context | |
Ramu (1986) | X | X | X | X | ||||||||||||||
Zimmer and Aldrich (1987) | X | X | X | X | ||||||||||||||
Bal (1998) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Peng (2004) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Khavul et al. (2009) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Au and Kwan (2009) | X | X | ||||||||||||||||
Mustafa and Chen (2010) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Rutherford (2010) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Grimm et al. (2013) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Amoako and Lyon (2014) | X | X | ||||||||||||||||
Alsos et al. (2014) | X | X | ||||||||||||||||
Khayesi et al. (2014) | X | X | X | X | ||||||||||||||
Daspit and Long (2014) | X | X | ||||||||||||||||
Amoako and Lyon (2014) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Dana (2015) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Shi et al. (2015) | X | X | X | X | ||||||||||||||
Chakraborty et al. (2015) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Gassie-Falzone (2016) | ||||||||||||||||||
Lux et al. (2016) | X | X | ||||||||||||||||
Basit (2017) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Verver and Koning (2018) | X | X | X | X | ||||||||||||||
Andersson et al. (2018) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Burt (2019) | X | X | X | X | ||||||||||||||
Criaco et al. (2021) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Sydow et al. (2022) | X | X | X | |||||||||||||||
Cutcher and Dale (2023) | X | X | ||||||||||||||||
Li and Johansen (2023) | X | |||||||||||||||||
Kazlou and Wennberg (2023) | X | X |
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Share and Cite
Chakuzira, W.; Mkansi, M.; Okoche, J.M.M. Entrepreneurship and Kinship: An Integrative Review of a Nascent Domain. Adm. Sci. 2024, 14, 248. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14100248
Chakuzira W, Mkansi M, Okoche JMM. Entrepreneurship and Kinship: An Integrative Review of a Nascent Domain. Administrative Sciences. 2024; 14(10):248. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14100248
Chicago/Turabian StyleChakuzira, Wellington, Marcia Mkansi, and John Micheal Maxel Okoche. 2024. "Entrepreneurship and Kinship: An Integrative Review of a Nascent Domain" Administrative Sciences 14, no. 10: 248. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14100248
APA StyleChakuzira, W., Mkansi, M., & Okoche, J. M. M. (2024). Entrepreneurship and Kinship: An Integrative Review of a Nascent Domain. Administrative Sciences, 14(10), 248. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14100248