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Beyond essential and non-essential: migrant women entrepreneurs’ experiences of COVID-19 in the UK

Beyond essential and non-essential: migrant women entrepreneurs’ experiences of COVID-19 in the UK

Mensah, Esther ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3550-3527 (2025) Beyond essential and non-essential: migrant women entrepreneurs’ experiences of COVID-19 in the UK. In: ISBE 2025: “Collaborating across Entrepreneurial Ecosystems: opportunities for inclusion, innovation, sustainability, resilience and growth”, 5th - 6th November, 2025, University of Glasgow and the University of Strathclyde, UK.

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Abstract

This qualitative exploratory study explores how migrant women entrepreneurs in the UK experienced and responded to the COVID-19 crisis in the UK, in childcare, food retail, and hospitality businesses. The empirical material presented in the paper is part of a bigger exploratory study on women entrepreneurs during COVID. Drawing on four qualitative case studies, it examines how government designations of “essential” and “non-essential” services, exclusion from formal relief schemes, and the weight of caregiving responsibilities shaped entrepreneurial pathways. The analysis shows that motives for entrepreneurship were multi-layered, combining necessity, passion, and family considerations, and varied across sectors. Crisis conditions were strongly structured by sectoral boundaries: while childcare and hospitality providers faced enforced closure, food retail businesses remained open but operated under intense strain. Formal support was often inaccessible, leading women to blend welfare, community ties, and family labour as alternative mechanisms. Responses were further filtered through identities as mothers, migrants, and community members, which influenced how entrepreneurs navigated disruption. Post-crisis trajectories reflected not only economic outcomes of recovery, stabilisation, or plateau, but also the emotional legacies of stress, fatigue, and faith.

Item Type: Conference or Conference Paper (Paper)
Uncontrolled Keywords: migrant women entrepreneurs, COVID-19, crisis response, childcare and hospitality sectors, sectoral boundaries, United Kingdom
Subjects: H Social Sciences > H Social Sciences (General)
Faculty / School / Research Centre / Research Group: Greenwich Business School
Greenwich Business School > Executive Business Centre
Related URLs:
Last Modified: 06 Feb 2026 16:44
URI: https://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/52416

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