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Emprendimiento en los grupos vulnerables: Una respuesta a la pobreza del migrante interno en Tijuana
Author(s) -
Georgina Tejeda Vega,
Zurisaddai Rubio Arriaga,
Marianna Berrelleza Carrillo,
María Soledad Plazola Rivera
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
revista relayn micro y pequeña empresa en latinoamérica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2594-1674
DOI - 10.46990/relayn.2021.5.1.102
Subject(s) - humanities , vulnerability (computing) , immigration , geography , political science , entrepreneurship , art , archaeology , computer security , computer science , law
Incentivar el emprendimiento entre los migrantes puede constituirse como una respuesta viable a su vulnerabilidad económica y social, sobre todo si se les apoya, tal y como se hace en otras naciones como España, Uruguay, Chile y Brasil (Guinea, 2016).   Por ello, es menester conocer algunos aspectos relacionados a la actuación de los migrantes que se apostaron en Tijuana México, y que no obstante las barreras que suelen surgir en estos casos, optaron por emprender un negocio propio, según la investigación mixta, descriptiva y correlacional que se efectuó entre ciento cincuenta y nueve migrantes internos captados y cuestionados durante 2019. Encouraging entrepreneurship among migrants can be a viable response to their economic and social vulnerability, especially if they are supported as is done in other nations such as Spain, Uruguay, Chile and Brazil (Guinea, 2016).  For this, it is necessary to know some aspects related to the performance of those who bet in Tijuana Mexico, despite the barriers that usually arise when starting a business.  In this way, here is an extract from a mixed, descriptive and correlational investigation that was carried out on the one hundred and fifty-nine internal migrants captured and questioned in 2019.AbstractFostering entrepreneurship among immigrants may provide a viable response to their economic and social vulnerability, above all if supported as done by other nations such as Spain, Uruguay, Chile and Brazil (Guinea, 2016). Ik is iecessary, therefore, to obtain some aspects related to immigrant activity who stationed themselves in Tijuana, Mexico and despite barriers that had arisen in these cases, they chose to start their own businesses according to a mixed, descriptive and correlational research that was carried out to perceived internal immigrants and to whom a survey was applied in 2019.

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