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Capacity Building in Developing and Emerging Countries: From Mindset Transformation to Promoting Entrepreneurship and Diaspora Involvement. Elie Chrysostome, State University of New York. (2019), Springer Edition[Record]

  • Abdoulkadre Ado

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  • Abdoulkadre Ado
    Telfer School of Management, University of Ottawa, Canada

Bringing together nearly twenty scholars from multiple academic disciplines, this publication on capacity building was carefully edited by Elie Chrysostome, a professor of international business and strategic management at the State University of New York. Over the last two decades, Professor Chrysostome has specialized in topics related to international entrepreneurship, immigrant entrepreneurship, small business internationalization, and capacity building in the context of developing countries just to cite a few. Indeed, southern countries are at the crossroads of challenging development priorities, significant human and resource potential, and international cooperation opportunities. Within this setting, southern nations also known as developing and emerging nations must choose the right development policy mix based on the potential each country has and the international partners available. In this regard, capacity building appears to be an important goal that many developing nations are pursuing. Meanwhile, capacity building also as the bedrock of any successful development policy is a topic that is still poorly documented in the context of emerging and developing countries and even more so in Africa. Therefore, this book brings a novel contribution on the topic by analyzing four major aspects of capacity building with regards to economic transformation that should aim to close the gap between where nations are at the moment and where they want to be within the next few years. The book also raises the issue of capacity building from an entrepreneurial perspective that aligns with sustainable development in those nations under investigation. Moreover, the topic of diaspora remittances was included in the book as well as ways to revamp the business environment in developing and emerging countries through more impactful fiscal instruments and anti-corruption strategies. Although not only focused on Africa, in the context of African developing countries, it is important to highlight specific mentions made in the book. In the early parts of the book, the authors raise the need for Africans to transform their mindset to enable long term and prosperous capacity building revolution across the continent. Such mindset transformation requires Africans to innovate from a human cognition standpoint to free themselves from backward thinking that is tainted by superstition and counter-productive elements of some subcultures among other things. Also, it urges Africans, particularly policy makers, to comprehend the circumstances that support capacity building while revisiting and improving the policies and strategies surrounding Africa’s sustainable transformation. Meanwhile, for capacity building to occur, the role of female entrepreneurship in developing countries was strongly emphasized, particularly in the case of African countries where women represent a significant portion of the workforce and entrepreneurs such as in Madagascar and Kenya, where organizations like the African Capacity Building Foundation are increasingly supporting girls and women as change makers, enhancing effective governance in Africa, and creating leaders in development management (ACBF, 2020). This is even more important when regions like Africa have women as the majority of the population but also youth as the dominant portion of the population, prompting a capacity building strategy that puts younger generations at the forefront of the capacity building strategy. Therefore, the promotion of grassroots entrepreneurship that generates more value-added but also aligns with sustainable development goals across Africa and beyond is important. Besides, supporting SMEs from emerging and developing countries that are intensive exporters is key to achieving the goal of capacity building in those nations. Some interesting examples of case study in the agribusiness with a focus on West African countries like Burkina Faso is included. Another important factor for capacity building is the role that diaspora and its remittances can play in the context of developing countries, particularly in the regions of Africa, Asia, …

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