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Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject
in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of
travel. They are relevant but also visionary. This far-reaching
Research Agenda highlights the main features of entrepreneurial
university research over the two decades since the concept was
first introduced, and examines how technological, environmental and
social changes will affect future research questions and themes. It
revisits existing research that tends to adopt either an idealised
or a sceptical view of the entrepreneurial university, arguing for
further investigation and the development of bridges between these
two strands. Offering insights into both mainstream and critical
approaches, top international scholars discuss a wide range of
studies from various analytical and methodological perspectives.
Contributions envision the future development of the 'alternative
entrepreneurial university', creating space for more localised and
contextualised institutions that can be both responsive to the
needs of their societies and proactive in shaping them. Academics
and practitioners interested in the entrepreneurial university will
find this forward-looking Research Agenda to be crucial reading. It
will also be beneficial for PhD researchers in framing key
directions and questions for future research.
Focusing on academic entrepreneurship in the university context,
the authors explore how researchers, teachers, students, academic
managers and administrators make sense of entrepreneurship and of
the paradoxes and contradictions involved. The book investigates
how these diverse entrepreneurial actors and their stakeholders
interpret and analyse entrepreneurial activities within the
university ecosystem. New Movements in Academic Entrepreneurship
covers research commercialisation, academic start-up companies and
entrepreneurship education, as well as university-society
relationships more widely. With contributions from Europe, North
America and Asia, this book helps to broaden our understanding of
academic entrepreneurship using original theoretical insights and
rich empirical data. Essential reading for students and researchers
of entrepreneurial universities and ecosystems, this book provides
fresh theoretical frameworks and an inclusive understanding of
academic entrepreneurship.
Elgar Research Agendas outline the future of research in a given
area. Leading scholars are given the space to explore their subject
in provocative ways, and map out the potential directions of
travel. They are relevant but also visionary. This far-reaching
Research Agenda highlights the main features of entrepreneurial
university research over the two decades since the concept was
first introduced, and examines how technological, environmental and
social changes will affect future research questions and themes. It
revisits existing research that tends to adopt either an idealised
or a sceptical view of the entrepreneurial university, arguing for
further investigation and the development of bridges between these
two strands. Offering insights into both mainstream and critical
approaches, top international scholars discuss a wide range of
studies from various analytical and methodological perspectives.
Contributions envision the future development of the 'alternative
entrepreneurial university', creating space for more localised and
contextualised institutions that can be both responsive to the
needs of their societies and proactive in shaping them. Academics
and practitioners interested in the entrepreneurial university will
find this forward-looking Research Agenda to be crucial reading. It
will also be beneficial for PhD researchers in framing key
directions and questions for future research.
The applied nature of the field of entrepreneurship means it is
crucial for scholars and researchers to connect with practitioners
to ensure that their work has an impact on real-world activity.
This insightful book examines the need to bridge the gap between
scientific rigour in entrepreneurship research and its practical
relevance to external stakeholders, and demonstrates clearly how
this can be achieved in practice. Featuring cutting-edge research,
Rigour and Relevance in Entrepreneurship Research, Resources and
Outcomes presents and evaluates current critical approaches in the
field, analysing their theoretical value and their relevance to
policy and practice. Chapters examine these approaches through the
lens of specific issues and circumstances such as intrapreneurship,
freelancing, crowdfunding, family firms and technology-based
start-ups, providing a variety of perspectives and exemplifying how
pragmatic questions can productively influence research agendas.
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. Students at all levels
in these fields will also find it useful for considering future
research.
Entrepreneurship education is an area of growing importance within
entrepreneurship research. This book critically discusses
innovation and entrepreneurship in new and varied contexts in
Europe. Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Education explores the
need for researching innovation and learning in family firms, micro
firms, SMEs and in rural and network contexts. The chapters offer
new insights into the antecedents of business performance in SMEs
by investigating social capital and marketing capabilities. The
book includes a new typology for analysing entrepreneurship
education programmes, discusses opportunities in embedding
entrepreneurship in teacher education and explores entrepreneurship
in the informal learning arenas in universities. This book includes
a wide range of studies from different analytical and
methodological perspectives and from various regional and
industrial contexts. As such, it is a valuable tool for advanced
students wishing to gain an overview of research on European
entrepreneurship. Researchers in entrepreneurship would also
benefit from the up-to-date research analysis in this book.
Contributors include: L. Aaboen, T. Aadland, K. Axelsson, D.
Aylward, M. Belarouci, R. Blackburn, A. De Massis, V. Francois, U.
Hytti, S. Joensuu-Salo, E.J.B. Jorgensen, F. Kelliher, S. Kettunen,
K. Kohtakangas, C. Lafaye, E. Laveren, M. Markowska, L. Mathisen,
P. Parkkari, L. Reinl, P. Rovelli, K. Sorama, F. Welter, M.
Westerberg
Context is everything in entrepreneurship research. This book
compellingly demonstrates the ways in which the distinctive
European cultural, societal and geographic environments enable
research into new entrepreneurial phenomena. It also gives guidance
as to how future research should endeavour to understand the
influences of context. The Dynamics of Entrepreneurial Contexts
explores the European methodological diversity encompassing various
academic disciplines and research paradigms. Contributors suggest
European entrepreneurship research should give priority to the
local and individual to enable new research questions that are
resonant with context. Finally, the book welcomes critical analyses
of entrepreneurship that aim at questioning the taken-for-granted
assumptions and analyses that increase our understanding of the
counterproductive forms of entrepreneurship. Providing a unique
insight into the emerging topics of entrepreneurship research, both
European and international researchers will benefit from the
different analytical and methodological perspectives provided to
understand the differences, similarities and the configurations of
context. With a variety of regional and industry examples,
postgraduates will significantly benefit from the overview of new
and important research. Contributors include: S. Aaltonen, E.
Akola, K. Axelsson, R. Blackburn, F.M. Cesaroni, L. Hoeglund, U.
Hytti, A. Isaksson, T. Jones, T. Lepistoe, H. Loefsten, M.
Martensson, M. Pospisilova, M. Ram, H. Rannikko, H. Rydehell, A.
Sentuti, S. Tegtmeier, E. Tornikoski, M. Villares-Varela, D. Yar
Hamidi
Innovation is seen as one of the main engines of economic growth.
It is generally assumed to be gender neutral when, in fact, the
gendered construction of innovation has been traditionally
masculine. This Handbook explores the nexus between innovation and
gender by providing a wide range of studies from different
analytical and methodological perspectives and from various
regional and industry contexts and draws implications for a
gender-inclusive innovation policy. The multi-disciplinary group of
contributors discuss topics such as gender and innovation in new
and small businesses, and growth businesses; addressing innovation
in different organizational contexts ranging from public sector
health care to mining and forestry; researching gender in
innovation policy and in design and materiality. This Handbook will
be useful to researchers looking to understand parallels between
research on gender and innovation on one hand, and research on
gender and entrepreneurship or management on the other. It will
also be invaluable to students looking for an overview of research
in both areas. Contributors include: R. Aidis, G.A. Alsos, N.
Amble, E. Andersson, L. Andersson, P. Axelsen, K.-E. Berglund, T.
Bijedic, E. Boerjesson, S. Brink, K. Ehrnberger, K. Ettl, E.
Fernandes, L. Foss, C. Henry, U. Hytti, S. Ilstedt, A. Isaksson, M.
Johansson, A. Kovalainen, S. Kriwoluzky, T. Kvidal-Rovik, R. Leite,
M. Lindberg, B. Ljunggren, E. Ljunggren, S. Martins, S. Poutanen,
S.R. Sardeshmukh, R.M. Smith, L.K. Snerthammer, M. Tillmar, F.
Welter
Innovation is seen as one of the main engines of economic growth.
It is generally assumed to be gender neutral when, in fact, the
gendered construction of innovation has been traditionally
masculine. This Handbook explores the nexus between innovation and
gender by providing a wide range of studies from different
analytical and methodological perspectives and from various
regional and industry contexts and draws implications for a
gender-inclusive innovation policy. The multi-disciplinary group of
contributors discuss topics such as gender and innovation in new
and small businesses, and growth businesses; addressing innovation
in different organizational contexts ranging from public sector
health care to mining and forestry; researching gender in
innovation policy and in design and materiality. This Handbook will
be useful to researchers looking to understand parallels between
research on gender and innovation on one hand, and research on
gender and entrepreneurship or management on the other. It will
also be invaluable to students looking for an overview of research
in both areas. Contributors include: R. Aidis, G.A. Alsos, N.
Amble, E. Andersson, L. Andersson, P. Axelsen, K.-E. Berglund, T.
Bijedic, E. Boerjesson, S. Brink, K. Ehrnberger, K. Ettl, E.
Fernandes, L. Foss, C. Henry, U. Hytti, S. Ilstedt, A. Isaksson, M.
Johansson, A. Kovalainen, S. Kriwoluzky, T. Kvidal-Rovik, R. Leite,
M. Lindberg, B. Ljunggren, E. Ljunggren, S. Martins, S. Poutanen,
S.R. Sardeshmukh, R.M. Smith, L.K. Snerthammer, M. Tillmar, F.
Welter
The role of resources is pivotal in entrepreneurship for the
success of new and small ventures, though most face resource
constraints. The book offers multiple perspectives on analyzing and
understanding the importance of resources in entrepreneurship
development. Approaching the subject with both a practice-theory
and research-based approach, the contributors analyse topics such
as processes and structures in social entrepreneuring;
entrepreneurship and equity in crowdfunding; and forming alliances
with large firms to overcome resource constraints. The contributors
provide evidence, for example, on how business angels can
contribute more than finance to small ventures and how the
flexibility of resources is important in internationalisation.
Students and scholars of entrepreneurship, business and management,
and other related subjects will find this book to be of interest.
It will also be of use to practitioners in the field looking for
practical advice. Contributors include: J. Alpenberg, R. Blackburn,
Y. Chu, P. Eriksson, D. Fletcher, B. Giordano, S. Horner, T. Huynh,
U. Hytti, S. Joensuu-Salo, B. Johannisson, P. Karhunen, O.-M.
Nevalainen, I. Olimpieva, K. Salamonsen, H. Sapienza, P.
Strandberg, E. Varamaki, A. Viljamaa, F. Welter
This volume demonstrates the dynamism and diversity of
entrepreneurship as it is practised by men and women across a
variety of contexts, and also the vibrancy and relevance of the
entrepreneurship research field as it attempts to understand and
communicate this widespread social and economic phenomenon.' - Sara
Carter, Strathclyde Business School, UK'This book showcases
thought-provoking studies that reflect what European
entrepreneurship scholarship has successfully pioneered:
penetrating analyses of often taken-for-granted assumptions about
the nature of entrepreneurship. These chapters direct readers to
where entrepreneurship scholarship will likely go in the future,
particularly in using 'gendered' perspectives to realize the
heterogeneity of entrepreneurial activity in various contexts.' -
William B. Gartner, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark and
California Lutheran University, US By combining high-quality and
in-depth research in the field, this book provides a
state-of-the-art analysis of the current topical issues in European
entrepreneurship and small business research. With contributions
from international experts, the book provides a particular focus on
the behaviour between individuals and groups within different
contexts; the personal and structural factors that shape
entrepreneurial and small business activity; and a focus on gender
in entrepreneurship within different contexts. Students and
academics interested in gender and entrepreneurship will benefit
from this far-reaching book. The contextual and practical approach
will also be of use to national and regional policy makers.
Contributors: S. Aaltonen, R. Blackburn, J. Byrne, A. Chepurenko,
O. Duygulu, S. Fattoum, C.I. Goegus, M. Guerrero, J. Hermes, U.
Hytti, T. Mainela, S. Marlow, J. Mitra, OE. OErge, S. Tegtmeier, D.
Urbano, F. Welter
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