Immigrant groups often pursue entrepreneurial endeavors in their new home country. Even though both immigrant entrepreneurship and organizational identity have received scholarly attention, there has been little systematic exploration of identity strategies pursued by immigrant-owned organizations. In this article, we develop a theoretical framework that draws on the concepts of liability of foreignness and social identity theory in the context of immigrant entrepreneurship. Our framework explores how immigrant entrepreneurs may negotiate identities for their firms through the development of specific identity strategies that confirm or underplay their national/ethnic identities in order to survive in their immediate environment. We develop a model that shows how these confirmations or underplaying strategies work both for firms that have an individualistic entrepreneurial orientation, as well as those with a collective/associative entrepreneurial orientation. We also suggest two contextual moderators to this relationship: (1) the image of the founder's country of origin, and (2) the presence of immigrant networks in the host country, which may alter the effectiveness of identity strategies in terms of organizational mortality outcomes.
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1 March 2017
Research Article|
March 01 2017
To Be or Not to Be an Ethnic Firm: An Analysis of Identity Strategies in Immigrant-owned Organizations
Publisher: Emerald Publishing on behalf of Sacred Heart University
Online ISSN: 2574-8904
Print ISSN: 1550-333X
Published by DigitalCommons©SHU, 2017
2017
licensed reuse rights only
New England Journal of Entrepreneurship (2017) 20 (1): 18–33.
Citation
Das D, Kwesiga E, Sardesmukh S, Juma N (2017), "To Be or Not to Be an Ethnic Firm: An Analysis of Identity Strategies in Immigrant-owned Organizations". New England Journal of Entrepreneurship, Vol. 20 No. 1 pp. 18–33, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/NEJE-20-01-2017-B002
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