Abstract:
This paper discusses the women entrepreneurs and identifies obstacles faced by them. Going on the trend of
studying the growing space and breaking the glass ceiling, there has been a significant increase in the study
and research related to the women entrepreneurship but this paper finds the gap in the research related to the
remote areas of the Indian nation. Women are equally catalytic in job creation and innovative (Hemantkumar
P. Bulsara, Jyoti Chandwani, Shailesh Gandhi). Growing industrialization, social legislation and along with
the spread of higher education and awareness the emergence of women-owned business is highly increasing as
a global economy. This analytical study takes the new turn in directions which cites more and richer aspects
of women’s entrepreneurship. Kaushik (2013) women have taken an interest in recent year in self-business.
Research on women entrepreneurship is minor in the scholastic field (Baker et al., 1997), and it might take a
leap of years to be enabled the chance to lead such research. This study shows a true enthusiasm for giving
women a more conspicuous place in science, as an investigation by Brush, Carter, Gatewood, Greene, and
Hart (2002), pointing expressly at dispersing fantasies about women and uplift out of their challenges. The
study suggests that, the women are less considerate and under-utilized in terms of professional stature in
developing countries. Self-employment in their manner is less populated in early times and is sought as a
means to alleviate poverty, unemployment, and gender-based occupational segregation (Alarape, 2009).
Description:
Thirteenth Biennial Conference on Entrepreneurship/ Edited by Sasi Misra, Sunil Shukla, Ganapathi Batthini