Women in Entrepreneurship Lit Review

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Data found by other studies

External factors that could explain the data

@article{carter1992family},
 title={Women as Entrepreneurs : A Study of Female Business Owners, Their Motivations, Experiences and Strategies for Success},
 author={Carter, Sara and Cannon, Tom},
 year={1992},
 abstract={Intended for business and academic libraries, this book provides case studies of women entrepreneurs. It considers problems which are specific to women in business; these include raising finances, finding clients, and the simultaneous management of domestic commitments, especially childcare.},
 filename={Carter et al (1992) - Women as Entrepreneurs: A Study of Female Business Owners, Their Motivations, Experiences, and Strategies for Success}
URL={http://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/47694/}
}

This examines reasons women may or may not become business owners.

@article{birley1987training},
 title={Do Women Entrepreneurs Require Different Training?},
 author={Birley, Sue, Moss, Caroline, Peter, Saunders},
 journal={American Journal of Small Business},
 year={1987},
 abstract={This paper analyzes the characteristics of male and female participants attending pioneering entrepreneurship development programs, which form part of an economic strategy directed at increasing the quality and quantfty of new firms. The participants did not need to have a business plan, finance available or formal education, but must have had a “reasonably feasible idea”. The results show significant differences between the characteristics of the male and female entrepreneurs, and the businesses which they form. .},
 filename={Lerner et al (2011) - Private equity and long run investment the case of innovation}
URL={https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/137594.pdf}
}

This discusses the different characteristics of male and female entrepreneurs.


@article{demartino2003mba},
 title={Differences between women and men MBA entrepreneurs: exploring family flexibility and wealth creation as career motivators?},
 author={DeMartino, Richard, Barbato, Robert},
 journal={Journal of Business Venturing},
volume={18}
pages={815-832}
issue={6}
 year={2003},
 abstract={Previous research into gender differences among entrepreneurs has yielded varied explanations as to why female entrepreneurs differ from male entrepreneurs. This study explores motivational differences using a sample of MBA entrepreneurs. This allows comparisons between male and female entrepreneurs, who are similar in terms of business education, educational credentials, and other important variables. Logistic regression is used to measure the relationship between career motivators and gender and between career motivators and gender adjusted for marital status and the presence of dependent children. The study concludes that differences between female and male entrepreneurs become larger if the entrepreneurs are married with dependent children.}
URL={http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S088390260300003X}
}

Study found that differences between male/female entrepreneurs largest when they're married with dependent children as opposed to unmarried.


@article{zapalska1997psychpoland},
 title={A profile of woman entrepreneurs and enterprises in Poland},
 author={Zapalska, Alina},
 journal={Journal of Small Business Management},
pages={76-82}
 year={1997},
 abstract={A study investigates whether Polish female entrepreneurs possess the characteristics required for effective performance as entrepreneurs. Trait analysis suggests that there are no significant differences between the psychological propensities of successful female and male entrepreneurs. The study also explores the types of businesses started by Polish women, their business objectives, and the relationship between the entrepreneur's background and the entrepreneur's decision to start a new venture.}
URL={http://search.proquest.com/docview/220989307?pq-origsite=gscholar}
}

This study found that male and female entrepreneurs don't differ too much psychologically (compared to the study cited above).