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Sustainable entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial ecosystems
research is ever evolving and this timely book stimulates further
exploration, offering a research agenda and alternative approaches.
Presenting new scientific evidence together with policy and other
practical implications, chapters demonstrate the vibrancy and
diversity of approaches in the field. Chapters on sustainable
entrepreneurship analyse the circular economy, entrepreneurial
decision-making logics, the drivers of eco-process innovations and
strategic sustainability decision-making. Entrepreneurial
ecosystems are investigated through discussion of different
ecosystem orientations as factors influencing entrepreneurial
behaviour. This thought-provoking book concludes with consideration
of the conditions predicting entrepreneurial activity or behaviour,
including family background and the growth of social and commercial
SMEs. This book's up-to-date analysis and practical insight will
prove invaluable to scholars and researchers in entrepreneurship as
well as other business and management academics, policy-makers and
practitioners.
Indigenous sociology makes visible what is meaningful in the
Indigenous social world. This core premise is demonstrated here via
the use of the concept of the Indigenous Lifeworld in reference to
the dispossessed Indigenous Peoples from Anglo-colonized first
world nations. Indigenous lifeworld is built around dual
intersubjectivities: within peoplehood, inclusive of traditional
and ongoing culture, belief systems, practices, identity, and ways
of understanding the world; and within colonized realties as
marginalized peoples whose everyday life is framed through their
historical and ongoing relationship with the colonizer nation
state. The Oxford Handbook of Indigenous Sociology is, in part, a
response to the limited space allowed for Indigenous Peoples within
the discipline of sociology. The very small existing sociological
literature locates the Indigenous within the non-Indigenous gaze
and the Eurocentric structures of the discipline reflect a
continuing reluctance to actively recognize Indigenous realities
within the key social forces literature of class, gender, and race
at the discipline's center. But the ambition of this volume, its
editors, and its contributors is larger than a challenge to this
status quo. They do not speak back to sociology, but rather, claim
their own sociological space. The starting point is to situate
Indigenous sociology as sociology by Indigenous sociologists. The
authors in The Oxford Handbook of Indigenous Sociology, all leading
and emerging Indigenous scholars, provide an authoritative, state
of the art survey of Indigenous sociological thinking. The
contributions in this Handbook demonstrate that the Indigenous
sociological voice is a not a version of the existing sub-fields
but a new sociological paradigm that uses a distinctively
Indigenous methodological approach.
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