Authors :
Pascal Sem Mbimbi; Cheko Misakabu Blanchard; Mupeta Mutwila Trésor; Mukuzo Muheme Victoire; Mudimbi Wa Mudimbi Dony; Kabanishi Mputu Emmanuel; Mujinga Kalenga Mamie; Sipila Kaozi Emmanuel; Eliezer Eden Mwenz Wazeng
Volume/Issue :
Volume 10 - 2025, Issue 9 - September
Google Scholar :
https://tinyurl.com/kuvsnje9
Scribd :
https://tinyurl.com/3ce3h9ju
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/25sep146
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Abstract :
This study explores entrepreneurial dynamics in the informal sector of copper and malachite art crafts in
Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). It seeks to understand how artisans manage to construct sustainable
professional trajectories despite precarity, lack of institutional recognition, and economic instability. Adopting an inductive
perspective, the study employs Grounded Theory to generate conceptual categories from the field, capable of explaining
artisans’ logics of action and resilience. The methodological approach is qualitative and ethnographic, combining semi-
structured interviews with storytelling. This posture prioritizes the meanings that actors themselves attribute to their
experiences, progressively building an interpretative framework rooted in empirical data.
Findings reveal eleven structuring dimensions, including initial motivations, structural constraints, flexible
organizational forms, intergenerational transmission, symbolic recognition, and the mobilization of economic, social,
cultural, and identity resources. Craftwork thus emerges as a space of resistance, dignity, and cultural valorisation, beyond
its economic function. In response to artisans’ persistent vulnerability, the study proposes an integrated model for
strengthening entrepreneurial resilience in the craft sector, structured around five key axes: flexible formalization, economic
securitization, social reinforcement, cultural recognition, and openness to frugal innovation.
Keywords :
Vulnerable Entrepreneurship, Informal Craft Sector, Precarity, Symbolic Capital, Space of Resistance, Artisanal Know- How, Entrepreneurial Resilience, Cultural Capital.
References :
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- Institut National de la Statistique (INS). (2022). Enquête nationale sur l’emploi, le secteur informel et les conditions de vie des ménages. Kinshasa : INS.
- Kiptoo, L., Odhiambo, W., & Muriithi, S. (2024). Informal artisan entrepreneurship and resilience in Kenyan urban markets. African Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management, 8(1), 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1177/2788490424123456
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- Willame, J.-C. (1997). Banyarwanda et Banyamulenge : Violences ethniques et gestion de l'identitaire au Kivu. L’Harmattan.
This study explores entrepreneurial dynamics in the informal sector of copper and malachite art crafts in
Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). It seeks to understand how artisans manage to construct sustainable
professional trajectories despite precarity, lack of institutional recognition, and economic instability. Adopting an inductive
perspective, the study employs Grounded Theory to generate conceptual categories from the field, capable of explaining
artisans’ logics of action and resilience. The methodological approach is qualitative and ethnographic, combining semi-
structured interviews with storytelling. This posture prioritizes the meanings that actors themselves attribute to their
experiences, progressively building an interpretative framework rooted in empirical data.
Findings reveal eleven structuring dimensions, including initial motivations, structural constraints, flexible
organizational forms, intergenerational transmission, symbolic recognition, and the mobilization of economic, social,
cultural, and identity resources. Craftwork thus emerges as a space of resistance, dignity, and cultural valorisation, beyond
its economic function. In response to artisans’ persistent vulnerability, the study proposes an integrated model for
strengthening entrepreneurial resilience in the craft sector, structured around five key axes: flexible formalization, economic
securitization, social reinforcement, cultural recognition, and openness to frugal innovation.
Keywords :
Vulnerable Entrepreneurship, Informal Craft Sector, Precarity, Symbolic Capital, Space of Resistance, Artisanal Know- How, Entrepreneurial Resilience, Cultural Capital.