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999 _c50198
_d50198
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008 180719b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aIsiwu, Prisca I.
_932100
245 _aPsychological Factors that Influences Entrepreneurial Intention Among Women in Nigeria: A Study Based in South East Nigeria
300 _a176-195 p.
520 _aThe study examined psychological factors that influence women entrepreneurial intention in Nigeria. One hundred and seventeen (117) women were drawn within Enugu metropolis using purposive random sampling technique. Their ages ranged between 18 and 50 years, with a mean age of 22.07. Cross-sectional design was adopted. Job involvement (JI), self-efficacy, goal orientation and entrepreneurial intention scales were instruments used for data collection. Three hypotheses were tested. Step-wise multiple regressions were the main statistics used for data analysis. Results of the regression analysis showed that among the studied variables, only self-efficacy was a significant predictor of women participation in entrepreneurship (p < 0.01). The three dimensions of goal orientation, learning goal orientation, prove (performance-prove) orientation, and avoid (performance-avoid) orientation, were not significant predictors of women participation in entrepreneurship. Similarly, JI did not also significantly predict women participation in entrepreneurship. A good practical implication of the finding of this study is that women who develop high self-efficacy are more likely to be entrepreneurs and that strategies to build high self-efficacy among women are needed to make more women become entrepreneurs in order to enhance national/grass-root development. Limitations were made, while suggestions for further studies were stated.
653 _aJob involvement
653 _aself-efficacy
653 _awomen
653 _agoal orientation
653 _aentrepreneurship
700 _aOnwuka, Ifeanyi
_932101
773 0 _049818
_968039
_aMisra, Sasi
_dNew delhi Sage Publications
_o5558128
_tThe Journal of Entrepreneurship Vol 26
_z0971-3557
942 _2ddc
_cJA-ARTICLE