Recognition, relevance and renewal: reframing perspectives on entrepreneurship and networking through Aboriginal worldviews

This thesis examines the influence of ontology on the theorisation and practice of entrepreneurship and networking. Research was conducted through in-depth interviews, most of which were undertaken with Aboriginal entrepreneurs, two literature reviews, participant observation, and a field journal. R...

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Main Author: Fort, Warrick Nerehana
Format: Thesis
Published: Curtin University 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/69388
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author Fort, Warrick Nerehana
author_facet Fort, Warrick Nerehana
author_sort Fort, Warrick Nerehana
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis examines the influence of ontology on the theorisation and practice of entrepreneurship and networking. Research was conducted through in-depth interviews, most of which were undertaken with Aboriginal entrepreneurs, two literature reviews, participant observation, and a field journal. Research findings contribute to a ‘grander narrative’ of entrepreneurship, which recognises how entrepreneurship continues to be practised in a variety of settings and by a range of people whose ontologies have been marginalised within capitalist societies.
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format Thesis
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:41:12Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Curtin University
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-693882018-08-01T07:48:35Z Recognition, relevance and renewal: reframing perspectives on entrepreneurship and networking through Aboriginal worldviews Fort, Warrick Nerehana This thesis examines the influence of ontology on the theorisation and practice of entrepreneurship and networking. Research was conducted through in-depth interviews, most of which were undertaken with Aboriginal entrepreneurs, two literature reviews, participant observation, and a field journal. Research findings contribute to a ‘grander narrative’ of entrepreneurship, which recognises how entrepreneurship continues to be practised in a variety of settings and by a range of people whose ontologies have been marginalised within capitalist societies. 2017 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/69388 Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle Fort, Warrick Nerehana
Recognition, relevance and renewal: reframing perspectives on entrepreneurship and networking through Aboriginal worldviews
title Recognition, relevance and renewal: reframing perspectives on entrepreneurship and networking through Aboriginal worldviews
title_full Recognition, relevance and renewal: reframing perspectives on entrepreneurship and networking through Aboriginal worldviews
title_fullStr Recognition, relevance and renewal: reframing perspectives on entrepreneurship and networking through Aboriginal worldviews
title_full_unstemmed Recognition, relevance and renewal: reframing perspectives on entrepreneurship and networking through Aboriginal worldviews
title_short Recognition, relevance and renewal: reframing perspectives on entrepreneurship and networking through Aboriginal worldviews
title_sort recognition, relevance and renewal: reframing perspectives on entrepreneurship and networking through aboriginal worldviews
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/69388