This edited collection showcases the evolution of rural entrepreneurship research over the first quarter of the 21st Century. Contributions examine what we have learnt about different aspects of rural entrepreneurship and what still needs to be understood. Each chapter looks for inspiration from the past to consider opportunities and challenges for the future. Critiques of current understandings of the dynamic rural economic landscape acknowledge the need for agility and new ideas to inform future research and policy challenges.
The book has been motivated by the growing community of researchers that participate in an annual Rural Entrepreneurship Conference. Further strengthening that community, chapters are co-authored by experienced and early-career scholars, forming new connections that blend past and future perspectives to address prescient challenges facing rural economies. After 20 years of fertilising exchange of ideas between rural stakeholders and academics, this edited collection sets a marker in the timeline of the evolution of an increasingly international network of rural entrepreneurship researchers.
Foreword; Roger M Turner
Chapter
1. Rural Entrepreneurship: Harvesting Ideas and Sowing New Seeds;
Gary Bosworth, Polly Chapman, Robert Newbery, Artur Steiner, and Don J Webber
Chapter
2. What can Participant Observations tell us about Rural
Entrepreneurship?; Andreas Giazitzoglu and Gary Bosworth
Chapter
3. Entrepreneurial Universities and their Engagement with Rural
Enterprise; Barbara Tocco, James A Cunningham, Amelia Magistrali, Jeremy
Phillipson, and Matthew Gorton
Chapter
4. Land and the Community; Mike Danson, Anne Smith, and Geoff Whittam
Chapter
5. Understanding and Supporting Farm Development Strategies; Peter
Gittins and Ron Methorst
Chapter
6. An Alternative Explanation of the RuralUrban Productivity Gap;
Don J Webber and Pattanapong Tiwasing
Chapter
7. Rural Entrepreneurship and Location: Does Rurality Matter for
Small Firms?; David Deakins, Jo Bensemann, Abhishek Mukherjee, and Jonathan
M. Scott
Chapter
8. Social Enterprise for Rural Health and Wellbeing; Artur Steiner
and Danielle Hutcheon
Chapter
9. Food and Rural Entrepreneurship; Eifiona Thomas Lane, Rebecca
Jones, and Robert Bowen
Chapter
10. Rural Entrepreneurship and International Development; Robert
Newbery and Paul Igwe
Chapter
11. The Role of Rural Entrepreneurship in the Redevelopment of Rural
Areas Previously involved in Resource Extraction; Nikolaos Apostolopoulos,
Ilias Makris, Sotiris Apostolopoulos, and Panagiotis Liargovas
Chapter
12. Digital Rural Entrepreneurship: Two Decades of Research into the
Interaction between Entrepreneurs and Policy; Koen Salemink, Polly Chapman,
and Leanne Townsend
Chapter
13. Clustering Policy and its Effects on Rural Entrepreneurship over
20 Years; Ian Merrell and David Charles
Chapter
14. Creating and Extracting Illicit Value from the Rural Environment:
An Ethnographic Study of Two Organised Criminal Businesses; Orlando Goodall
and Robert Smith
Chapter
15. Rural Entrepreneurship and the Formalisation of Rural Tourism in
Marginal Destinations: Challenges and Perspectives; Lavinia Wilson-Youlden
and Helen Farrell
Chapter
16. Does Gender Matter?; Sally Shortall and Orla Collins
Chapter
17. Rural Regeneration through Arts and Culture: Shifting
Perspectives on Gaelic and Enterprise Contexts; Mike Danson, Kathryn A
Burnett, and Douglas Chalmers
Gary Bosworth is Research Lead in the Department of Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Strategy and part of the iNCITE research centre at Northumbria University.
Polly Chapman is CEO of HISEZ, which owns and operates Impact Hub Inverness, a coworking space that is part of the international network of Impact Hubs. As well as running the Hub she is also a business adviser working to support social enterprises and SMEs in the Highlands and islands of Scotland.
Robert Newbery is a Professor of Entrepreneurship and Head of the Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Strategy department at Newcastle Business School, Northumbria University.
Artur Steiner is a Professor in Social Entrepreneurship and Community Development. He leads the Community, Citizenship and Participation Research Group at the Yunus Centre, Glasgow Caledonian University.
Don J Webber has a background in applied economics but is better described as a researcher of policy-relevant, social science issues. Specifically he is interested in research that puts people and social issues (rather than money) at the core of economic concern.