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Routledge Companion to the Makers of Modern Entrepreneurship [Hardback]

Edited by (Augsberg University, Germany), Edited by (Indiana University, USA)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 657 g, 1 Tables, black and white; 1 Line drawings, black and white; 1 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Routledge Companions in Business, Management and Marketing
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Sep-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138838101
  • ISBN-13: 9781138838109
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  • Cena: 301,80 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 288 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 657 g, 1 Tables, black and white; 1 Line drawings, black and white; 1 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Routledge Companions in Business, Management and Marketing
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Sep-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138838101
  • ISBN-13: 9781138838109
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Once relegated to the dusty shelves of ancient muses, research and scholarship on entrepreneurship has exploded as a field of research, with impactful additions from a range of disciplines rendering the field a tricky one to traverse. The Routledge Companion to the Makers of Modern Entrepreneurship offers a comprehensive guide to entrepreneurship, providing an authoritative exploration of the key people and their ideas. This book tells the stories of the scholars who have set the standard and tone for thinking and analysing entrepreneurship.

Edited by two of the worlds leading entrepreneurship scholars, this comprehensive volume offers a platform for understanding and future research that is both state-of-the-art and authoritative. It expands on how modern entrepreneurship has developed, with a focus on the key "makers" of the field including theories, such as social psychology; concepts, such as neuroeconomics; and types, such as political entrepreneurship.

The contributions to the collection are grouped into three sections:





Emergence of Entrepreneurship Research Theories in Modern Entrepreneurship Concepts and Makers in Modern Entrepreneurship

This companion is essential reading for students and academics interested in entrepreneurship, entrepreneurial management and business management.

Recenzijas

'Instead of presenting new research findings in entrepreneurship, this new book provides interesting stories about many of the luminary scholars in the field of entrepreneurship. Their intellectual and academic journeys are interesting and shed light on how entrepreneurship emerged as a genuine cross-disciplinary field of research.' - Robert Fairlie, Professor, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA

'The autobiographical essays in this unique book reveal the passions and motivations of the scholars whose works created the surge in entrepreneurship research, and it provides an essential history of the thinkers and their thoughts' - John T. Scott, Professor of Economics, Dartmouth College, USA

'This book is an extraordinary guide to the mysterious world of entrepreneurship. It is an attempt at defining a non-disciplinary area, born like a new country with blurred boundaries open to continuous contamination. Exploring entrepreneurship is often finding something that is necessary but never sufficient to define it. Despite this, a new community has grown around it. This book presents a cultural challenge (not only to academia) that will fit our agenda in the decades to come.' - Stefano Paleari, Full Professor of Finance, University of Bergamo, Italy

1 Makers of modern entrepreneurship 1(2)
David B. Audretsch
Erik E. Lehmann
2 The godfather of entrepreneurship 3(11)
Zoltan J. Acs
Introduction
3(1)
The New School
4(2)
WZB and Small Business Economics
6(1)
The geography of innovation
6(1)
The Max Planck Institute of Economics
7(1)
George Mason University
7(3)
The London School of Economics
10(4)
3 Fifty years in the making: my career as a scholar of organizations and entrepreneurship 14(18)
Howard E. Aldrich
Introduction
14(1)
Academic beginnings
14(2)
Finding a community of scholars at Cornell
16(1)
Early work on business succession in cities in the United States and England
16(2)
Stanford University
18(1)
Developing an appreciation of evolutionary thinking
19(1)
The resource dependence perspective
20(1)
Becoming an entrepreneurship scholar
21(2)
Organizations evolving
23(1)
Graduate students' contributions
24(1)
Current research on the maker movement
25(2)
Looking forward: advice to young scholars
27(1)
Closing thoughts
28(4)
4 Roots and wings 32(10)
David B. Audretsch
The setting
32(1)
Discovering small business
33(1)
Taking innovation seriously
33(1)
The Schumpeterian paradox
34(1)
Resolving the Schumpeterian paradox: entrepreneurship
35(1)
The missing W of economics
35(1)
Scaling up
36(2)
The entrepreneurial society
38(2)
Final thoughts
40(2)
5 The effects of business ownership on people's lives 42(11)
Sara Carter
Getting into entrepreneurship research
42(1)
Getting on in entrepreneurship research
43(1)
Entrepreneurship and agricultural restructuring
44(1)
The lived experiences of the small business owner
45(3)
Women entrepreneurs: still not accessing finance
48(1)
Economic well-being in the entrepreneurial household
49(1)
Looking backward and forward: advice to young scholars
50(3)
6 Back to the roots 53(11)
Marc Cowling
Academic provenance
53(1)
Building a research career
54(2)
The halcyon days
56(2)
Breaking the apron strings
58(1)
The middle years
59(3)
My future research
62(1)
Suggestions for young researchers
62(2)
7 A research journey into entrepreneurial finance 64(10)
Douglas J. Cumming
Silvio Vismara
Introduction
64(1)
Toward research in entrepreneurial finance
65(3)
How research on IPOs evolved
68(1)
How research on crowdfunding might evolve
69(5)
8 What an opportunity! 74(17)
Per Davidsson
Background
74(1)
Dissertation: small firm growth
75(1)
SMEs, job creation, and regional development
76(2)
Nascent entrepreneurship
78(2)
Further studies of small firm growth
80(2)
Conceptualization of entrepreneurship and "entrepreneurial opportunities"
82(9)
9 Finding myself staring at the future 91(10)
Dimo Dimov
Introduction
91(1)
Hooked on opportunity
92(1)
The glasses of experience
92(1)
From insight to intention
93(1)
Beyond single person, single insight
94(1)
Opportunity confidence and two types of success
95(1)
Grappling with the unbearable elusiveness
96(2)
No time for time
98(1)
Where next?
99(2)
10 Judgement, the theory of the firm, and the economics of institutions: my contributions to the entrepreneurship field 101(15)
Nicolai N. Foss
Introduction: the reluctant entrepreneurship scholar
101(1)
Personal background
101(2)
Early work
103(2)
Entrepreneurship, governance, and organizational design
105(1)
Entrepreneurship and the classical Coasian questions
105(2)
Entrepreneurship and organizational design in the established firm
107(2)
Entrepreneurship, institutions, and economic growth
109(2)
Coda
111(5)
11 Entrepreneurship and growth: a personal story 116(14)
Michael Fritsch
Introduction
116(1)
Finding the topic
116(2)
The effect of new businesses on regional development
118(6)
Regional entrepreneurship culture
124(1)
Conclusions and further questions
125(5)
12 Anecdotes of destiny 130(16)
William B. Gartner
Introduction
130(1)
Family and background
130(2)
Ideas and their origins
132(1)
Entrepreneurship as variation
133(4)
Entrepreneurship as organizing
137(3)
Scholarship as community
140(2)
Impact
142(4)
13 An Austrian perspective on firms and markets: my contributions to entrepreneurship theory 146(8)
Peter G. Klein
Introduction
146(1)
Austrian economics, entrepreneurship, and the theory of the firm
147(1)
The judgment-based view
148(2)
Reflections on Kirzner
150(1)
Moving forward
150(4)
14 Corporate entrepreneurship: a research journey 154(13)
Donald F. Kuratko
The beginning in entrepreneurship
154(1)
The evolution into corporate entrepreneurship
155(1)
Developing the CEAI
156(1)
Insights into managerial levels
157(2)
Defining the domains of CE
159(1)
Examining control and failure
160(1)
Framing a corporate entrepreneurial strategy
161(1)
The journey continues
162(5)
15 From integrating functions to integrating ideas 167(5)
Albert N. Link
What was in that residual?
167(1)
Public—private research partnerships
168(1)
The Journal of Technology Transfer
169(1)
Public-sector entrepreneurship
169(3)
16 Location matters 172(9)
Olav Sorenson
Introduction
172(1)
Stanford University
172(2)
Industrial clusters
174(1)
Home sweet home
175(1)
University of Toronto
176(1)
Syndication networks
176(1)
Venture capital and economic growth
177(1)
Business schools
178(1)
Entrepreneurship and inequality
178(3)
17 Visions of the past: wish you had been there 181(21)
Roy Thurik
Some introduction
181(1)
Some more introduction
182(1)
In the beginning there was productivity and pricing
183(1)
Embedment, encounters and economics
184(1)
Discovering small business economics
185(1)
The E of SBE
186(1)
Policy and the business cycle
187(1)
Finally, some entrepreneurship research
188(1)
Hello, biology
189(1)
Looking back and ahead
190(12)
18 A place for entrepreneurship 202(11)
Mary Lindenstein Walshok
Introduction: early career
202(2)
Regional transformation through innovation and entrepreneurship
204(2)
Lessons learned from a dynamic innovation economy
206(3)
The power of connected entrepreneurial teams
209(1)
Conclusion: research needs to better document cultural factors and social dynamics
210(3)
19 Wandering between contexts 213(20)
Friederike Welter
Introduction: it's all about context!
213(1)
How it all started
213(4)
The distinctiveness of entrepreneurship in a transition context
217(2)
Context matters
219(3)
Contextualizing entrepreneurship research
222(3)
And now? Contextualising entrepreneurship theory and policy
225(1)
Moving on: who are the makers offuture entrepreneurship?
226(7)
20 Re-search = me-search 233(13)
Johan Wiklund
Introduction: why and how it all started
233(1)
Dissertation research on the growth affirms
234(2)
Entrepreneurial orientation
236(2)
Stockholm
238(1)
Wining and dining
239(1)
Working with PhD students
240(1)
Entrepreneurship and mental health: still crazy after all these years
241(2)
In closing
243(3)
21 The conquest of interestingness: entrepreneurial ownership mobility 246(13)
Mike Wright
Introduction
246(1)
My back pages
246(1)
Maggie's farm
247(3)
Fourth time around
250(1)
The world of research has gone berserk
251(2)
No direction home
253(1)
Still on the road, heading for another joint
254(5)
22 Researching entrepreneurship at the intersection: reflections on three decades of research 259(18)
Shaker A. Zahra
Introduction
259(1)
Learning about entrepreneurship
259(2)
Research at the intersection
261(1)
Focus on corporate entrepreneurship
262(1)
Diversity, variety and context
262(3)
International and internationalization
265(2)
Expanding boundaries
267(2)
Entrepreneurship as knowledge
269(1)
The invisible college and idea factory
270(1)
Lessons and moving forward
271(1)
Conclusion
272(5)
Index 277
David B. Audretsch is a Distinguished Professor and Ameritech Chair of Economic Development at Indiana University, USA, where he also serves as Director of the Institute for Development Strategies. He is also an Honorary Professor of Industrial Economics and Entrepreneurship at the WHU-Otto Beisheim School of Management in Germany and a Research Fellow of the Centre for Economic Policy Research in London, UK.









Erik E. Lehmann is a Full Professor of Management and Organization at Augsburg University, Germany, and Director of the Global Business Management Program. He is also Adjunct Professor at Indiana University, USA and Visiting Professor at University of Bergamo, Italy.