|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
A volume in The Entrepreneurship SIG at European Academy of
Management: New Horizons with strong Traditions Series Editors Luca
Gnan, University of Rome Tor Vergata; Hans Lundberg, Linnaeus
University; Lucrezia Songini, Eastern Piedmont University; and
Massimiliano Pellegrini, Princess Sumaya University The objective
with the Strategic Interest Group in Entrepreneurship (SIG
Entrepreneurship) of the European Academy of Management (EURAM) is
to be the leading research community for engaged entrepreneurship
scholars in Europe. The SIG Entrepreneurship aims at promoting
research and networking interests for individuals and research
groups focused on entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial styles of
management. This is done by providing a wide-ranging, engaged and
internationally-focused forum to discuss and develop research and
practice in the field. We put a distinct focus on the key European
feature - 'context matter' - why we try in all activities to
promote and stimulate what 'European' might mean in any given
context. It means different things in different contexts - and that
is the whole point - and thereby the key strength of the European
takes on the matter as we see it. This is our idea of the European
perspective on entrepreneurship. The tradition of European scholars
on entrepreneurship and SMEs system has been consolidated during
the last three decades and an increasingly distinct European school
of thought has emerged as a consequence. This development provides
a solid base for the future development of the field where Europe
and its entrepreneurship scholars will play an increasingly
prominent role. With this concern, this book has been managed,
gathering the best contributions of our annual meeting re-edited
and improved. The central theme is presenting entrepreneurship
understood as a working attitude, a mode of thinking, a concrete
everyday practice and increasingly an identity marker for ways of
being and living within liquid modernity. Entrepreneurship is
nowadays a broadly endorsed and accepted signifier for forms of
organizing that targets human, organizational and economic renewal
and growth.
This book provides insights into how new ventures in emerging
economies and developing countries generate social innovation. It
showcases new forms of business and how they are different from
traditional business models. With increasing drive for innovation
in emerging markets and lack of knowledge of how these markets
work, this book enriches existing literature by looking at how such
businesses in developing economies break new ground in a daunting,
resource constrained environment. The book examines successful
individual entrepreneurs, social relationships, product innovation,
processes, systems and markets through cases. It navigates across
key theoretical elements including individual initiative-taking,
agency, and opportunity contexts. This book will be a useful
reference to understanding the dynamics of new ventures in emerging
markets and how they fuel social innovation and sustainable
development.
The tradition of European scholars on entrepreneurship has been
consolidated during the last three decades and an increasingly
distinct European school of thought has emerged as a consequence.
This development provides as solid base for the future development
of the field where Europe and its entrepreneurship scholars will
play an increasingly prominent role in the development of the
field. The distinct focus of the book is key European features -
'contexts matter' - to promote and stimulate what 'European' might
mean in any given context. The book valorizes different contexts
and key strengths of the European perspective.
This book provides insights into how new ventures in emerging
economies and developing countries generate social innovation. It
showcases new forms of business and how they are different from
traditional business models. With increasing drive for innovation
in emerging markets and lack of knowledge of how these markets
work, this book enriches existing literature by looking at how such
businesses in developing economies break new ground in a daunting,
resource constrained environment. The book examines successful
individual entrepreneurs, social relationships, product innovation,
processes, systems and markets through cases. It navigates across
key theoretical elements including individual initiative-taking,
agency, and opportunity contexts. This book will be a useful
reference to understanding the dynamics of new ventures in emerging
markets and how they fuel social innovation and sustainable
development.
This book is an insightful text looking at sustainable innovation
and the emerging fourth sector, i.e. hybrid organizations, through
an interdisciplinary approach. The book illuminates what hybrid
organizations are and how they generate new ways of creating
blended value to secure the well-being of future generations and
preservation of ecological services. The book also discusses how
sustainable innovation may offer creative solutions to societal
issues, the sharing economy and the circular economy. This book
will appeal to those taking MBA and EMBA programmes, and those with
an interest in creating sustainable business and innovation
solutions.
This book is an insightful text looking at sustainable innovation
and the emerging fourth sector, i.e. hybrid organizations, through
an interdisciplinary approach. The book illuminates what hybrid
organizations are and how they generate new ways of creating
blended value to secure the well-being of future generations and
preservation of ecological services. The book also discusses how
sustainable innovation may offer creative solutions to societal
issues, the sharing economy and the circular economy. This book
will appeal to those taking MBA and EMBA programmes, and those with
an interest in creating sustainable business and innovation
solutions.
A volume in The Entrepreneurship SIG at European Academy of
Management: New Horizons with strong Traditions Series Editors Luca
Gnan, University of Rome Tor Vergata; Hans Lundberg, Linnaeus
University; Lucrezia Songini, Eastern Piedmont University; and
Massimiliano Pellegrini, Princess Sumaya University The objective
with the Strategic Interest Group in Entrepreneurship (SIG
Entrepreneurship) of the European Academy of Management (EURAM) is
to be the leading research community for engaged entrepreneurship
scholars in Europe. The SIG Entrepreneurship aims at promoting
research and networking interests for individuals and research
groups focused on entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial styles of
management. This is done by providing a wide-ranging, engaged and
internationally-focused forum to discuss and develop research and
practice in the field. We put a distinct focus on the key European
feature - 'context matter' - why we try in all activities to
promote and stimulate what 'European' might mean in any given
context. It means different things in different contexts - and that
is the whole point - and thereby the key strength of the European
takes on the matter as we see it. This is our idea of the European
perspective on entrepreneurship. The tradition of European scholars
on entrepreneurship and SMEs system has been consolidated during
the last three decades and an increasingly distinct European school
of thought has emerged as a consequence. This development provides
a solid base for the future development of the field where Europe
and its entrepreneurship scholars will play an increasingly
prominent role. With this concern, this book has been managed,
gathering the best contributions of our annual meeting re-edited
and improved. The central theme is presenting entrepreneurship
understood as a working attitude, a mode of thinking, a concrete
everyday practice and increasingly an identity marker for ways of
being and living within liquid modernity. Entrepreneurship is
nowadays a broadly endorsed and accepted signifier for forms of
organizing that targets human, organizational and economic renewal
and growth.
The tradition of European scholars on entrepreneurship has been
consolidated during the last three decades and an increasingly
distinct European school of thought has emerged as a consequence.
This development provides as solid base for the future development
of the field where Europe and its entrepreneurship scholars will
play an increasingly prominent role in the development of the
field. The distinct focus of the book is key European features -
'contexts matter' - to promote and stimulate what 'European' might
mean in any given context. The book valorizes different contexts
and key strengths of the European perspective.
|
|