Entrepreneurship is considered by scholars as a driving force that brings economic
development to localities. However, despite the great advance of programs to encourage
entrepreneurial activity, both private and public, peripheral entrepreneurship still lacks
attention to reach the market and provide benefits to the local community, minimizing
social inequality. Thus, this dissertation had as a research problem the question: “how
can programs to encourage entrepreneurship in the outskirts of cities encourage young
people in social vulnerability to undertake creative businesses?”. Its objective was to
analyze the impact of the Ressignifica Program on the creation, implementation and
maintenance of startups by individuals in social vulnerability, residents of Recife
communities. The research has an exploratory-explanatory character, since there is a
need to better understand the entrepreneurial segment in question. Action research was
adopted as a method, in order to gather more knowledge about the subject, through a
qualitative approach. The main sources of data collection were semi-structured and indepth interviews with participants and the project coordinator, as well as documentary
research in reports provided by the Porto Digital Management Center. Consequently, it
was possible to go deeper into the experiences reported, to understand different nuances
of the reality of the periphery. Finally, with regard to the results, the impact that the
program provides for people residing in needy communities is noticeable, generating
growth opportunities for this audience; it is also noticed that programs to foster peripheral
entrepreneurship can provide the local development of new talents, since communities
have creative individuals who need to seek new solutions for a daily life of difficulties.
As a product, the dissertation culminated in the production of a minidocumentary,
portraying the perception of young people about the entrepreneurial journey for those
who are born and live in Recife's periphery.