Abstract:
This paper attempts to analyse the status of women entrepreneurship initiatives
through cooperatives in Jharkhand, India, and highlights the impact on tribal
women empowerment, and their leadership competencies on this economic
contribution. Bargaining for women leadership positions in all spheres of Asian
societies has emerged as an important concern in quest of equity, whereas tribal
women’s development has mostly remained limited to their participation in
various programmes run by the government as well as non-government agencies.
Recognition of women leaders from a tribal community in the 21st century is still a
distant dream. Yet economic empowerment and group activities in the tribal
regions of Jharkhand have revealed the potential and are seen as instrumental in
transforming leadership capabilities of tribal women leaders in the tribal
geography of Jharkhand. The paper shares the outcomes of the author’s study
based on case studies in the region, secondary data and, literature review, related
to the trends in tribal women’s leadership. The study reveals that women from
tribal communities of Jharkhand have traditionally been disempowered socially
and treated as less capable to lead and mostly refrained from societal leadership
positions. It is also revealed that with facilitation and support, they demonstrate
excellent leadership competencies to manage successful collective enterprises.
The study was able to showcase that given a facilitative environment woman from
tribal can also become successful leaders. The study also raises prominent
questions of assessing the impact and influence of such empowerment and
productive collective entrepreneurship on socioeconomic independence and
economic self-reliance.
Description:
Fourteenth Biennial Conference on Entrepreneurship/ Edited by Rajeev Sharma, Sunil Shukla, Amit Kumar Dwivedi & Ganapathi Batthini