This book aims to assess the roles of entrepreneurship and social
innovation for socio-cultural changes. It also evaluates farmers'
performance in disaster risk management at a community level toward
sustainable regional development in a rural haor region of Bangladesh.
To achieve the purpose of the research, both a qualitative method
(Trajectory Equifinality Modeling, TEM) and a quantitative method
(Structural Equation Modeling, SEM) are introduced, based on the results
of case studies on local entrepreneurs, interview and focus group
discussions with stakeholders, and questionnaire surveys of farm
households.
First, the results clarify that social capital is critically important
both for male and female entrepreneurs in the haor region, and that
education is more important to women for empowerment and technology
adoption in the entrepreneurial ecosystem in the haor region of
Bangladesh. In addition, it makes clear that the Common Interest Group
approach plays a role for women's empowerment in the target region.
Furthermore, it identifies the multi-causal relationships among the
factors affecting farm households' performance in disaster risk
management at the community level.
This book helps readers to understand regional development through
social and cultural transformation in a rural community where poverty
and gender discrimination are path-dependent problems.