The phenomenon of entrepreneurship has attracted researchers from a
variety of disciplines and a diverse number of analytical
approaches. Currently, there is a considerable amount of confusion
and a variety of conflicting theories which are being used
interchangeably and ambiguously. In this important new book, the
authors argue that there are analytically distinct forms of
entrepreneurship, each of them having an individual logic of their
own. They highlight the role of individual economic agents with
endowments of new knowledge or new combinations of old knowledge as
entrepreneurs, and thus identify them as dynamic factors in the
knowledge economy. Overall, this book not only provides a
contemporary overview of current research in the field, but also
summarizes the policy conclusions that can be drawn from current
research.
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