ABSTRACT This reflective article revisits a classic Area article on Asian women's entrepreneurship, examining its enduring significance through the lens of personal experience and three decades of research on ethnic minority enterprise. Hardill and Raghuram challenged simplistic cultural and structural explanations of entrepreneurship by demonstrating how gender, class, ethnicity and migration history intersect to shape business strategies. Drawing on lived experience in a British Asian family business and ethnographic research in the West Midlands, this article explores how their intersectional approach anticipated key developments in diaspora entrepreneurship research. The article examines how these entrepreneurs strategically mobilised transnational connections and cultural knowledge to create distinctive market niches, revealing internal heterogeneity within Asian business communities often obscured by research funding priorities and policy frameworks. Contemporary challenges including Brexit, COVID‐19, digital transformation and the rise of fast fashion are assessed against their foundational insights. The article argues for more nuanced, intersectional approaches to enterprise policy that recognise diversity within ethnic minority communities and position diaspora connections as strategic resources rather than cultural remnants. By grounding theoretical insights in personal narrative and longitudinal research, this reflection demonstrates how case study methodologies can illuminate the complex negotiations through which entrepreneurs work with identity, opportunity and constraint.
Monder Ram (Sun,) studied this question.