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Crafting social entrepreneuring : intra-sectional possibilities in responding to GBV

Hjorth, Daniel LU and Painter, Mollie (2026) In Entrepreneurship and Regional Development
Abstract

The intersectional nature of gender-based violence (GBV) makes it unlikely that survivors can escape the socio-economic precarity that perpetuates this social ill. Current conceptualizations of the entrepreneurial process do not sufficiently account for the material constraints GBV survivors face in developing countries and/or in contexts of poverty, and as such, may not fully grasp their capacities to engage in social entrepreneuring. We develop a theoretical model, drawing on new materialist thinking, to enable a better grasp of the intra-organizational conditions and agency that may allow GBV survivors to engage in social entrepreneuring. More specifically, our interpretation of the materiality involved in craft-based social... (More)

The intersectional nature of gender-based violence (GBV) makes it unlikely that survivors can escape the socio-economic precarity that perpetuates this social ill. Current conceptualizations of the entrepreneurial process do not sufficiently account for the material constraints GBV survivors face in developing countries and/or in contexts of poverty, and as such, may not fully grasp their capacities to engage in social entrepreneuring. We develop a theoretical model, drawing on new materialist thinking, to enable a better grasp of the intra-organizational conditions and agency that may allow GBV survivors to engage in social entrepreneuring. More specifically, our interpretation of the materiality involved in craft-based social entrepreneuring in Watville allows us to conceptualize entrepreneurial becoming as an intra-sectional response to GBV. The study´s unique contribution is that we offer a new-materialist processual conceptualization of the emergence of social entrepreneuring amongst GBV survivors with intergenerational histories of trauma, inequality and poverty that perpetuate the social and economic precarity in South Africa post Covid-19. This enables a more precise grasp of the agency and intra-sectionality at work in the empirical realities of women engaging in craft-based social entrepreneurship, with implications for processual and new materialist research beyond this case.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
Craft, GBV, new materialism, Posthumanism, process theory, social entrepreneurship
in
Entrepreneurship and Regional Development
publisher
Routledge
external identifiers
  • scopus:105026726687
ISSN
0898-5626
DOI
10.1080/08985626.2025.2610352
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2026 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
id
d1845b94-3922-495b-8c4b-8fae44ea6be2
date added to LUP
2026-03-04 22:24:51
date last changed
2026-03-13 11:07:48
@article{d1845b94-3922-495b-8c4b-8fae44ea6be2,
  abstract     = {{<p>The intersectional nature of gender-based violence (GBV) makes it unlikely that survivors can escape the socio-economic precarity that perpetuates this social ill. Current conceptualizations of the entrepreneurial process do not sufficiently account for the material constraints GBV survivors face in developing countries and/or in contexts of poverty, and as such, may not fully grasp their capacities to engage in social entrepreneuring. We develop a theoretical model, drawing on new materialist thinking, to enable a better grasp of the intra-organizational conditions and agency that may allow GBV survivors to engage in social entrepreneuring. More specifically, our interpretation of the materiality involved in craft-based social entrepreneuring in Watville allows us to conceptualize entrepreneurial becoming as an intra-sectional response to GBV. The study´s unique contribution is that we offer a new-materialist processual conceptualization of the emergence of social entrepreneuring amongst GBV survivors with intergenerational histories of trauma, inequality and poverty that perpetuate the social and economic precarity in South Africa post Covid-19. This enables a more precise grasp of the agency and intra-sectionality at work in the empirical realities of women engaging in craft-based social entrepreneurship, with implications for processual and new materialist research beyond this case.</p>}},
  author       = {{Hjorth, Daniel and Painter, Mollie}},
  issn         = {{0898-5626}},
  keywords     = {{Craft; GBV; new materialism; Posthumanism; process theory; social entrepreneurship}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  publisher    = {{Routledge}},
  series       = {{Entrepreneurship and Regional Development}},
  title        = {{Crafting social entrepreneuring : intra-sectional possibilities in responding to GBV}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08985626.2025.2610352}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/08985626.2025.2610352}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}