Dialogue as the negotiation or navigation of intergroup relations -- Politics, religion, and society in Mubarak's Egypt -- The interpretation of Muslim-Christian incidents -- The dialogical navigation and negotiation of Egyptian society -- Egypt and dialogue in a time of revolution.
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In: The European journal of development research: journal of the European Association of Development Research and Training Institutes (EADI), Band 27, Heft 5, S. 707-726
We examine credit constraint differentials between male and female manufacturing entrepreneurs using firm data from 16 sub-Saharan Africa countries. Small enterprises owned by female entrepreneurs are less likely to be credit constrained compared to their male counterparts, while this is reversed for medium-sized enterprises. A generalised Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition shows that the gap is predominantly a pure gender effect. We argue that this finding is mainly due to female favouritism in loans to micro and small firms because the gap is reversed for medium-sized enterprises and because we find no sign of superior female entrepreneurial performance in observable indicators. Adapted from the source document.