From Ecosystems to Advicescapes: Business, Development and Advice in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh

Author:

Lewis David1ORCID,Bowers Rebecca2,Heslop Luke3ORCID,Tawfic Simon4

Affiliation:

1. Department of International Development, LSE, Houghton St, London, England, UK

2. Department of Anthropology, LSE, Houghton St, London, England, UK

3. Social Science and Communications, Brunel University, London, England, UK

4. School of Law, University of Warwick, Coventry, England, UK

Abstract

The provision of entrepreneurship advice is a growing feature of private sector development in South Asia but has so far received little attention from researchers. The article explores the theme of business advice in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, drawing on recent ethnographic fieldwork among advice seekers to explore the significance of low-income households of business advice within the unfolding processes of both marketization and state support. It offers a theoretical innovation in the concept of ‘advicescape’, supported by ethnographic materials conveying local-level perspectives and experiences of business advice users. Despite the growth of a complex business support ecosystem in each country, the article finds that many such people are falling through the cracks, in that they face problems accessing advice, find its quality variable and instead rely heavily on informal advice. It ends with reflections on the now dominant business-and-development approach, including a brief observation on improving the inclusivity and effectiveness of entrepreneurship advice.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference29 articles.

1. Advocata. (2019, October 31). Is Sri Lanka keeping its small businesses small? https://www.advocata.org/commentary-archives/2019/10/31/is-sri-lanka-keeping-its-small-businesses-small.

2. Exploring the false promise of entrepreneurship through a postfeminist critique of the enterprise policy discourse in Sweden and the UK

3. State Capitalism and the New Global D/development Regime

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