Skip navigation

Navigating contested spaces: gendered interactions in everyday entrepreneuring among Jua Kali women in rural Kenya

Navigating contested spaces: gendered interactions in everyday entrepreneuring among Jua Kali women in rural Kenya

Sindani, Tabitha ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8638-3767, Guillaume, Cécile ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5331-8811, Ruiz‐Castro, Mayra ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1586-8270 and Elliott, Carole ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3838-4452 (2026) Navigating contested spaces: gendered interactions in everyday entrepreneuring among Jua Kali women in rural Kenya. Gender, Work and Organization. pp. 1-18. ISSN 0968-6673 (Print), 1468-0432 (Online) (doi:10.1111/gwao.70168)

[thumbnail of Open Access Article]
Preview
PDF (Open Access Article)
53665 SINDANI_Navigating_Contested_Spaces_Gendered_Interactions_In_Everyday_Entrepreneuring_(OA)_2026.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.

Download (1MB) | Preview

Abstract

This paper examines the daily experiences of Jua Kali women entrepreneurs in Western Kenya, unpacking how gendered power relations are enacted within informal marketplaces and how women entrepreneurs mobilize agency within these structurally and institutionally constrained contexts. Drawing on thirty in-depth interviews and ethnographic observations, this study reveals that Jua Kali women experience gendered control of economic resources and marketplace space through financial exploitation and male dominance, embodied regulation and normalized gendered exclusion through pervasive gender-based violence, and extractive informal governance and gendered state control through harassment, corruption, and chaotic tax enforcement. Despite these structural and interactional constraints, women mobilize a repertoire of agentic responses, from collective solidarity networks and strategic acquiescence to tactful compliance and evasive resistance, to sustain livelihoods in precarious working environments. This study contributes to feminist and critical entrepreneurship scholarship by theorizing entrepreneurial agency as gendered, relational, and materially constrained and by advancing a spatially attentive understanding of entrepreneurship that foregrounds the visualization of spatial configurations and material conditions shaping women's everyday entrepreneurial participation in the informal economy. It also offers important policy implications, calling for gender-responsive, context-specific interventions that address institutional voids and safeguard women's economic participation in the Global South.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: agency, gender, Global South/Keny, informal economy, Jua Kali, women's entrepreneurship, contested spaces
Subjects: H Social Sciences > H Social Sciences (General)
Faculty / School / Research Centre / Research Group: Greenwich Business School
Greenwich Business School > Executive Business Centre
Last Modified: 02 Jun 2026 16:04
URI: https://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/53665

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics