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Risk perception: how previous experiences influence the assessment of risk by immigrants in South Africa

Opportunity recognition and evaluation, or indeed creation, have been identified as critical for new venture creation. Studies have shown that they are mediated by risk perception, with some scholars arguing that the difference between entrepreneurs and non-entrepreneurs lies in how they perceive ri...

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Main Author: Sibanda, Pearson
Other Authors: Sewchurran, Kosheek
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Sibanda, Pearson
author2 Sewchurran, Kosheek
author_browse Sewchurran, Kosheek
Sibanda, Pearson
author_facet Sewchurran, Kosheek
Sibanda, Pearson
author_sort Sibanda, Pearson
collection Thesis
description Opportunity recognition and evaluation, or indeed creation, have been identified as critical for new venture creation. Studies have shown that they are mediated by risk perception, with some scholars arguing that the difference between entrepreneurs and non-entrepreneurs lies in how they perceive risk. It has also been argued that immigrants are more entrepreneurial than the indigenous population, a finding confirmed by studies of entrepreneurial firms in Silicon Valley in the United States of America. It has been suggested that if all immigrants in the world lived in one country, it would be the sixth most populous in the world. This is what makes the study of immigrant entrepreneurs essential, with a view to finding out what drives risk perception amongst them. The central question that this study intended to answer was: “How do immigrants’ previous experiences in their countries of origin, as well as their experiences in transit to and on arrival in South Africa, influence their risk perception?” A qualitative study involving 36 immigrants drawn from the rest of Africa and the Indian subcontinent was undertaken in various cities throughout South Africa. The study used the Grounded Theory methodology, through which data collected from semi-structured interviews were processed. Using a constructivist epistemological stance the data were then interpreted, resulting in a model for risk perception that built on other well-known models. The study found that previous experiences, hardships, youth and individualism do influence risk perception both directly and indirectly. This is in addition to having limited choices, limited government support and a desire for independence, which were also found to influence risk perception. The study therefore contributes to theories on, and the understanding of, risk perception, and by extension new venture creation. However, no support was found for the often stated view that immigrants become entrepreneurs because they cannot access the job market. Although the study was conducted on immigrant entrepreneurs, the findings may well be applicable to any other group. This would need to be confirmed by further studies. In addition further studies would be needed to establish how this knowledge can be used in efforts to encourage entrepreneurship.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:52:12.438Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29992 Risk perception: how previous experiences influence the assessment of risk by immigrants in South Africa Sibanda, Pearson Sewchurran, Kosheek Opportunity recognition and evaluation, or indeed creation, have been identified as critical for new venture creation. Studies have shown that they are mediated by risk perception, with some scholars arguing that the difference between entrepreneurs and non-entrepreneurs lies in how they perceive risk. It has also been argued that immigrants are more entrepreneurial than the indigenous population, a finding confirmed by studies of entrepreneurial firms in Silicon Valley in the United States of America. It has been suggested that if all immigrants in the world lived in one country, it would be the sixth most populous in the world. This is what makes the study of immigrant entrepreneurs essential, with a view to finding out what drives risk perception amongst them. The central question that this study intended to answer was: “How do immigrants’ previous experiences in their countries of origin, as well as their experiences in transit to and on arrival in South Africa, influence their risk perception?” A qualitative study involving 36 immigrants drawn from the rest of Africa and the Indian subcontinent was undertaken in various cities throughout South Africa. The study used the Grounded Theory methodology, through which data collected from semi-structured interviews were processed. Using a constructivist epistemological stance the data were then interpreted, resulting in a model for risk perception that built on other well-known models. The study found that previous experiences, hardships, youth and individualism do influence risk perception both directly and indirectly. This is in addition to having limited choices, limited government support and a desire for independence, which were also found to influence risk perception. The study therefore contributes to theories on, and the understanding of, risk perception, and by extension new venture creation. However, no support was found for the often stated view that immigrants become entrepreneurs because they cannot access the job market. Although the study was conducted on immigrant entrepreneurs, the findings may well be applicable to any other group. This would need to be confirmed by further studies. In addition further studies would be needed to establish how this knowledge can be used in efforts to encourage entrepreneurship. 2019-05-10T10:44:11Z 2019-05-10T10:44:11Z 2018 2019-05-10T09:11:04Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29992 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Sibanda, Pearson
Risk perception: how previous experiences influence the assessment of risk by immigrants in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Risk perception: how previous experiences influence the assessment of risk by immigrants in South Africa
title_full Risk perception: how previous experiences influence the assessment of risk by immigrants in South Africa
title_fullStr Risk perception: how previous experiences influence the assessment of risk by immigrants in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Risk perception: how previous experiences influence the assessment of risk by immigrants in South Africa
title_short Risk perception: how previous experiences influence the assessment of risk by immigrants in South Africa
title_sort risk perception how previous experiences influence the assessment of risk by immigrants in south africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29992
work_keys_str_mv AT sibandapearson riskperceptionhowpreviousexperiencesinfluencetheassessmentofriskbyimmigrantsinsouthafrica