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  • Edward Elgar Publishing  (10)
  • Northampton : Edward Elgar Publishing  (7)
  • Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar  (3)
  • Entrepreneurship  (10)
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  • 1
    ISBN: 9781788973403
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (128 pages)
    Series Statement: Entrepreneurship footprints series
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Keywords: Entrepreneurship ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Contents: Introduction to passion in entrepreneurship -- 2. Passion of entrepreneurs: Conceptual underpinnings and distinctions -- 3. Different potential targets of entrepreneurial passion -- 4. The profits and perils that can arise from entrepreneurial passion -- 5. Stoking the fires of entrepreneurial passion through engagement, education, and contagion -- 6. Passions of entrepreneurs in teams -- 7. Opportunities for future research on passion and entrepreneurship -- 8. Concluding thoughts on passion and entrepreneurship -- Index.
    Abstract: "The Profits and Perils of Passion in Entrepreneurship exposes the gaps in current knowledge and highlights opportunities ripe for additional investigation. This state-of-the art book also delivers essential guidelines for scholars on how to study entrepreneurial passion in a rigorous way. Melissa S. Cardon and Charles Y. Murnieks provide a critical review of the knowledge accumulated to date about passion in entrepreneurship, covering motivation, enthusiasm and excitement, as well as discussing debates about conceptual definitions, focus of analysis and methodological approaches. This includes the integration of different theories with an explanation of their commonalities and key distinctions. Examining the outcomes and antecedents of passion, chapters present empirical findings and explore future research questions for the topic. Scholars and students of entrepreneurship will find this book to be a comprehensive overview of the topic. Providing an accessible understanding of academic research, this book will also be a useful resource for practicing entrepreneurs and those who seek to support them"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton : Edward Elgar Publishing
    ISBN: 9781788974073
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (304 Seiten)
    Series Statement: Elgar research agendas series
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Keywords: Familienunternehmen ; Unternehmensnachfolge ; Personalführung ; Strategisches Management ; Korruption ; Unternehmensfinanzierung ; Digitalisierung ; Family-owned business enterprises ; Entrepreneurship ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: Contents: Introducing a research agenda for family business / by Andrea Calabrò -- 1 family trends shaping the family business landscape / Joyce Kox and Astrid Kramer -- 2 developing a "sociological imagination" of families in family business research / Eric R. Kushins and Elaina Behounek -- 3 history as a source and method for family business research / Christina Lubinski and William B. Gartner -- 4 engaging the next generation of family members through work: Adolescence and beyond / Marjan Houshmand, Marc-David L. Seidel and Dennis Ma -- 5 entrepreneurial legacy: How narratives of the past, present and future affect entrepreneurship in business families / Miruna Radu-Lefebvre, Vincent Lefebvre, Jean Clarke and William B. Gartner -- 6 from turmoil to synergism: How business leaders' human resource mental models and family control impact employees / Chiung-Wen Tsao and Shyh-Jer Chen -- 7 diversity on family firm boards: A research agenda for 2020-30 / Mary Barrett and Ken Moores -- 8 the role of vision in determining family, small business and minority ethnic business research / Claire Seaman and Richard Bent -- 9 strategic and organizational choices in family firms: Introducing sense-making / Luca Gnan and Giulia Flamini -- 10 advancing research on creativity in family firms / Julia Vincent Ponroy and Dianne H.B. Welsh -- 11 changing landscape of Indian family businesses / Kavil Ramachandran, Sougata Ray and Yashodhara Basuthakur -- 12 spatial familiness: A bridge between family business and economic geography / Rodrigo Basco and Lech Suwala -- 13 family-owned MNEs and transparency: A focus on corruption risk in host countries / Matteo Caroli, Claudia Pongelli and Alfredo Valentino -- 14 financing the growth of the family business: A research agenda / Alessandro Cirillo, Alexandra Dawson, Anneleen Michiels and Donata Mussolino -- 15 innovation in family business groups: Going beyond an r&d perspective / Marita Rautiainen, Suvi Konsti-Laakso and Timo Pihkala -- 16 the digitalization of family firms: A research agenda / Catherine E. Batt, Peter Cleary, Martin R.W. Hiebl, Martin Quinn and Pall M. Rikhardsson -- 17 digital business transformation in family firms: How the owning family sets the scene / Ann Sophie Löhde, Giovanna Campopiano and Daniela Gimenez Jiménez -- Conclusion andrea calabrò -- Index.
    Abstract: "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 exciting Research Agenda expertly addresses the question: What will be important within the family business field and for family businesses in practice over the next decade? Top international contributors explore farsighted theories, methods and topics, often taking a multi-disciplinary approach in order to outline the potential routes for further advancing family business research. Chapters cover the significance of new family trends, entrepreneurial legacy, board diversity, spatial-familiness, corruption, innovation and digital business transformation, challenging core assumptions surrounding the family business phenomenon and mapping the future of the discipline. A Research Agenda for Family Business will prove a stimulating read for family business and entrepreneurship scholars, as well as academics focusing on strategy, HR, organisational behaviour and corporate governance. Practitioners will also find this book valuable for reflecting on challenges that they are facing and navigating developments in the family business field"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton : Edward Elgar Publishing
    ISBN: 9781788978347
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (224 pages)
    Series Statement: Elgar impact of entrepreneurship research series
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 338/.04
    Keywords: Entrepreneurship ; New business enterprises
    Abstract: Contents: Preface -- 1. Business Creation: Wall Street and Main Street -- 2. Business Creation: Scope and Stability -- 3. Business Creation and Economic Growth: Churning is Good -- 4. New Firms are the Major Source of New Jobs -- 5. Different National Development: Different Business Creation -- 6. Context Counts, But May be Hard to Change -- 7. Growth Firms and Job Redistribution -- 8. Money is Necessary, But Not Sufficient -- 9. Everyone Pays, Some Benefit a Lot -- 10. An Important Option for the Desperate -- 11. New Firms: Change Agents Hiding in Plain Sight -- Appendix A Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) Program -- Appendix B U.S. Regional Business Dynamics Data Set -- Appendix C U.S. Panel Study of Entrepreneurial Dynamics (PSED) Program -- References -- Index.
    Abstract: "Policy makers give a lot of attention to business creation and entrepreneurship, but they do not have a good resource for understanding The Truth about Entrepreneurship. The extensive media coverage of Wall Street entrepreneurship provides an incomplete portrayal of most business creation. While both high profile and everyday new firms provide major contributions to economic growth, the ongoing, bottoms-up activity pursued by over half a billion around the world is not widely recognized. This book reviews some of the most salient features of grass roots business creation, such as the total amount of activity, differences related to national economic development, the relationship to business churning and job creation, the impact of national context, the mixed contributions of high growth firms, the modest effect of external financial support, the unequal distribution of sunk costs related to successful payback, importance as an option for the most desperate in poor countries, and the tendency to overlook the continuing incremental impact of Main Street business creation. Entrepreneurial scholars, faculty, policy analysists and graduate students interested in economic development, entrepreneurship and public policy will find clarity and gain a depth of knowledge about policy making and business creation with The Truth about Entrepreneurship"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton : Edward Elgar Publishing
    ISBN: 9781789906721
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (104 Seiten)
    Series Statement: Game changers and ground breakers series
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Keywords: Entrepreneurship ; Gründungsausbildung ; Wirtschaftsforschung ; Welt ; Businesspeople ; Entrepreneurship ; Entrepreneurship Research ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Contents: Preface -- 1. Scholarship, knowledge, concepts -- 2. Entrepreneurship as an academic subject -- 3. Knowledge and reality -- 4. Scholar and entrepreneur -- 5. A framework for scholarly inquiry -- 6. Awakening the entrepreneurial scholar -- Conclusion -- References -- Index.
    Abstract: "What does it mean to be an entrepreneurial scholar? Dimo Dimov draws on an eclectic range of philosophical ideas to investigate the study of entrepreneurs and makes the case for entrepreneurial scholarship to become more holistic, dynamic, and future oriented. This thought-provoking book argues that entrepreneurs seek to put knowledge in the service of the future, whereas scholars seek to put the future in the service of knowledge. Engaging with this tension, Dimov explores the relationship between the study of entrepreneurship and the entrepreneurs who are studied. Creating a framework for entrepreneurial scholarship, this concise book highlights four distinct styles and approaches to the field: theoretical, integrative, craft, and clinical. He invites reflection on the role and place of entrepreneurs in modern society, and puts the case that the entrepreneurial scholar should embrace inter-disciplinarity as a way of engaging with entrepreneurship as a holistic experience, and draw on design science as a way of improving the art and skills of entrepreneurship. This innovative book will be a stimulating read for academics and students of entrepreneurship, and its accessible format will also appeal to reflective practitioners"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 5
    ISBN: 9781786430960
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (352 Seiten)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Handbook of quantitative research methods in entrepreneurship
    RVK:
    Keywords: Entrepreneurship ; Wissenschaftliche Methode ; Empirische Methode ; Quantitative Methode ; Entrepreneurship Handbooks, manuals, etc Research ; Quantitative research Handbooks, manuals, etc ; Electronic books ; Handbuch ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: Contents: 1. Introduction to the handbook of quantitative research methods in entrepreneurship / George Saridakis and Marc Cowling -- 2. How do we measure firm performance? A review of issues facing entrepreneurship researchers / Josh Siepel and Marcus Dejardin -- 3. Exporting, technological collaboration and SME growth: An empirical analysis / Joan-Lluis Capelleras, Alex Rialp and Josep Rialp -- 4. As time goes by: Survival analysis as a method to study topics in entrepreneurship / Priscila Ferreira -- 5. Longitudinal and mixture modeling methods with application for family firm and entrepreneurship research / Melissa Medaugh, Laura Stanley, Franz W. Kellermanns and Thomas M. Zellweger -- 6. Social enterprise and social entrepreneurship - developing the evidence base using the UK small business survey / Catherine Robinson -- 7. Using meta-analysis to develop entrepreneurship research and theory / Yanqing Lai, George Saridakis and Chris Hand -- 8. Using RCTS as a research method for SME policy research: The UK experience / Stephen Roper -- 9. The role of small businesses in employing the unemployed and inactive / Peter Urwin and Franz Buscha -- 10. The promises of machine learning and big data in entrepreneurship research / Daniel S. Hain and Roman Jurowetzki -- 11. Studying small firms and their banks: A review of common methods and current concerns / Anoosheh Rostamkalaei and Mark Freel -- 12. Financing, selection, and value-adding effects of venture capital: A review of econometric methods and issues / Luca Pennacchio and Alessandro Sapio -- 13. Information asymmetries and entrepreneurial finance: Evidence from theories and empirics / Liang Han, Lin Tian and Biao Mi -- 14. Bank loan pricing to small firms: Sorting or market power? / Marc Cowling and Wei Yue -- Index.
    Abstract: This Handbook of Quantitative Research Methods in Entrepreneurship provides an overarching perspective on the methods and approaches critical to quantitative analysis of research on entrepreneurship. Representing the research efforts of 28 international scholars in entrepreneurship, this Handbook offers guidance for quantitative analysts at a time of increasing availability of economic, financial and business data. Contributions focus on a range of important empirical issues, including business survival, job creation, internationalisation, bank financing and specific types of entrepreneurial activity such as social enterprise and family business. The combined chapters synthesise and experiment with useful methods to navigate and unpack crucial entrepreneurial data. Informative and accessible, this Handbook is crucial reading for undergraduate and postgraduate students looking for a broad overview of the field. It will also be useful to established academics and researchers who require state of the art research, and policymakers and practitioners, who may use this book as an indispensable guide for reflecting on public interventions in the entrepreneurial arena
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 6
    ISBN: 9781839109690
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (224 Seiten)
    Series Statement: Frontiers in European entrepreneurship series
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Keywords: Entrepreneurship ; Sustainable development ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: Contents: 1. Sustainable entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial ecosystems: Introduction / Eddy Laveren, Robert Blackburn, Cyrine Ben-Hafaïedh, Cristina Díaz-García and Ángela González-Moreno -- Part I: Sustainable entrepreneurship -- 2. Circular economy and smes: Insights and EU situation / Cristina Díaz-García, Ángela González-Moreno and Francisco J. Sáez-Martínez -- 3. Entrepreneurial cognition, sustainability and venture performance: A machine learning approach / Anna Maija Vuorio And Kaisu Puumalainen -- 4. The way to be green: Determinants of eco-process innovations in the food sector / Maria C. Cuerva, Ángela Triguero and Francisco José Sáez-Martínez -- 5. Emotion as an ethical compass in strategic sustainability decisions / Kirsi Maaria Snellman and Henri Hakala -- Part IIentrepreneurial ecosystems -- 6. Understanding the emergence of the university-based entrepreneurial ecosystem: Comparing the university and company actors' perspectives / Katja Lahikainen -- 7. Under the surface of the agricultural entrepreneurial support ecosystems: Through the lens of complexity leadership theory / Jennie Cederholm Björklund and Jeaneth Johansson -- Part III: Entrepreneurial conditions -- 8. Does family business background matter? Career decision of postgraduate students / Clara Cardone-Riportella, Isabel Feito-Ruiz and David Urbano -- 9. Organisational conditions stimulating the entrepreneurial mindset / Dagmar Ylva Hattenberg, Olga Belousova And Aard J. Groen -- 10. Growth of social and commercial smes - a comparative study / Annu Kotiranta, Saila Tykkyläinen and Kaisu Puumalainen -- Index.
    Abstract: "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"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton : Edward Elgar Publishing
    ISBN: 9781789900033
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (200 Seiten)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Keywords: Gründungsausbildung ; Ausbilder ; Entrepreneurship ; Welt ; Entrepreneurship Study and teaching ; Business teachers ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: Contents: Preface -- Part I: The early years -- 1 deep learning and ee: Engage the world, change the world / Max Drummy -- 2 ee-stem in primary-middle years / James Davis -- 3 space to question / Catherine Brentnall -- 4 ee teachers: Agents of agency / Shani Hartley -- 5 the early years / Colin Jones -- Part II: The pre-graduate years -- 6 the art of making it possible / Paz Fernández de Vera -- 7 developing enterprising habits / Lesley Cottrell -- 8 creating giants / Maria Sourgiadaki -- 9 if i could ... Before i do / Colin Jones -- 10 insights of an accidental enterprise educator / Penny Matthews -- 11 the pre-graduate years / Colin Jones -- Part III: The graduate years -- 12 sheep assisted: The importance of being open to diversion / Elinor Vettraino -- 13 from instructor to educator / Norris Krueger -- 14 designing change: Seeing beyond the obvious and influencing others / Andy Penaluna -- 15 slow, lazy and stupid / Elena Oikkonen -- 16 getting curious about creativity: The why and the how? / Kathryn Penaluna -- 17 the graduate years / Colin Jones -- Part IV: The post-graduate years -- 18 if you're riding a dead horse, dismount! / Zen Parry -- 19 authentic grit: The elusive (but essential) entrepreneurial trait / Alex Maritz -- 20 specialist in enterprise and employability in uk he / Amy Gerrard -- 21 team entrepreneurial learning: Building sustainable businesses / Ainurul Rosli and Jane Chang -- 22 student-centred action learning / John Dobson -- 23 the post-graduate years / Colin Jones -- References -- / Index.
    Abstract: "With an increasing global demand for entrepreneurship education, and the need to prepare students for the challenges of an ever-changing world of work, Colin Jones tackles the difficult question: just where do these educators come from to meet this demand? How to Become an Entrepreneurship Educator is the first book to tackle how we create expert entrepreneurship educators at all levels of education. Using activity theory as a lens, the book unites the developmental trajectories of 20 eminent contemporary experts at different levels of enterprise and entrepreneurship education. Jones identifies these journeys in order to share the collective lessons learned. By highlighting a range of global insights, readers are enabled to reflect on their own strategies, creating order in the domain of enterprise and entrepreneurship education - an order that holds the power to propel the domain of enterprise and entrepreneurship education onwards to new heights. Such highly reflective accounts of how to teach entrepreneurship will be an invaluable guide to educators from numerous backgrounds to contemplate new strategies for teaching enterprise and entrepreneurship in the context of their own choosing"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar
    ISBN: 9781785362927
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xxi, 767 p) , cm
    Series Statement: International library of entrepreneurship 15
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Entrepreneurship in developing countries
    DDC: 338.04091724
    Keywords: Entrepreneurship ; Theorie ; Entwicklungsländer ; Entrepreneurship ; Entrepreneurship Developing countries ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Entwicklungsländer ; Entrepreneurship
    Abstract: This essential collection contains the most influential articles written over the past two decades that help us to understand the role of entrepreneurs in the development process, both theoretically and empirically. These important papers span a wide methodological range, from theoretical models, over cross-country studies, to firm- and household-level studies, utilizing both regression analysis and simulation techniques. Professor Beck has written an insightful introduction which provides an overview of the area of entrepreneurship in developing countries
    Abstract: Recommended readings (Machine generated): Philippe Aghion and Patrick Bolton (1997), 'A Theory of Trickle-Down Growth and Development', Review of Economic Studies, 64 (2), April, 151-72 -- Abhijit V. Banerjee and Andrew F. Newman (1993), 'Occupational Choice and the Process of Development', Journal of Political Economy, 101 (2), April, 274-98 -- David S. Evans and Boyan Jovanovic (1989), 'An Estimated Model of Entrepreneurial Choice under Liquidity Constraints', Journal of Political Economy, 97 (4), August, 808-27 -- Huw Lloyd-Ellis and Dan Bernhardt (2000), 'Enterprise, Inequality and Economic Development', Review of Economic Studies, 67 (1), January, 147-68 -- Anna L. Paulson, Robert M. Townsend and Alexander Karaivanov (2006), 'Distinguishing Limited Liability from Moral Hazard in a Model of Entrepreneurship', Journal of Political Economy, 114 (1), 100-144 -- Anna L. Paulson and Robert Townsend (2004), 'Entrepreneurship and Financial Constraints in Thailand', Journal of Corporate Finance, 10, 229-62 -- Murat F. Iyigun and Ann L. Owen (1999), 'Entrepreneurs, Professionals and Growth', Journal of Economic Growth, 4, June, 213-32 -- Christian Ahlin and Neville Jiang (2008), 'Can Micro-Credit Bring Development?', Journal of Development Economics, 86, 1-21 -- Suresh de Mel, David McKenzie and Christopher Woodruff (2008), 'Returns to Capital in Microenterprises: Evidence from a Field Experiment', Quarterly Journal of Economics, CXXIII (4), November, 1329-72 -- Signe-Mary McKernan (2002), 'The Impact of Microcredit Programs on Self-Employment Profits: Do Noncredit Program Aspects Matter?', Review of Economics and Statistics, 84 (1), February, 93-115 -- Christopher Woodruff and Rene Zenteno (2007), 'Migration Networks and Microenterprises in Mexico', Journal of Development Economics, 82, 509-28 -- Simeon Djankov, Rafael La Porta, Florencio Lopez-de-Silanes and Andrei Shleifer (2002), 'The Regulation of Entry', Quarterly Journal of Economics, CXVII (1), February, 1-37 -- Leora Klapper, Luc Laeven and Raghuram Rajan (2006), 'Entry Regulation as a Barrier to Entrepreneurship', Journal of Financial Economics, 82, 591-629 -- Thorsten Beck, Asli Demirgüç-Kunt and Vojislav Maksimovic (2005), 'Financial and Legal Constraints to Growth: Does Firm Size Matter?', Journal of Finance, LX (1), February, 137-77 -- Leo Sleuwaegen and Micheline Goedhuys (2002), 'Growth of Firms in Developing Countries, Evidence from Côte d'Ivoire', Journal of Development Economics, 68, 117-35 -- Luc Laeven and Christopher Woodruff (2007), 'The Quality of the Legal System, Firm Ownership, and Firm Size', Review of Economics and Statistics, 89 (4), November, 601-14 -- John McMillan and Christopher Woodruff (2002), 'The Central Role of Entrepreneurs in Transition Economies', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 16 (3), Summer, 153-70 -- Daniel Berkowitz and John E. Jackson (2006), 'Entrepreneurship and the Evolution of Income Distributions in Poland and Russia', Journal of Comparative Economics, 34, 338-56 -- Simon Johnson, John McMillan and Christopher Woodruff (2002), 'Property Rights and Finance', American Economic Review, 92 (5), 1335-56
    Abstract: Robert Cull and Lixin Colin Xu (2005), 'Institutions, Ownership, and Finance: The Determinants of Profit Reinvestment Among Chinese Firms', Journal of Financial Economics, 77, 117-46 -- Simeon Djankov, Yingyi Qian, Gérard Roland and Ekaterina Zhuravskaya (2006), 'Entrepreneurship in China and Russia Compared', Journal of the European Economic Association, 4 (2-3), April-May, 352-65 -- Raymond J. Fisman (2003), 'Ethnic Ties and the Provision of Credit: Relationship-Level Evidence from African Firms', Advances in Economic Analysis and Policy, 3 (1), Article 4, i-iii, 1-18 -- Mike Burkart, Fausto Panunzi and Andrei Shleifer (2003), 'Family Firms', Journal of Finance, LVIII (5), October, 2167-201 -- Marianne Bertrand, Simon Johnson, Krislert Samphantharak and Antoinette Schoar (2008), 'Mixing Family with Business: A Study of Thai Business Groups and the Families Behind Them', Journal of Financial Economics, 88, 466-98 -- William J. Baumol (1990), 'Entrepreneurship: Productive, Unproductive and Destructive', Journal of Political Economy, 98 (5), Part 1, October, 893-921 -- Kevin M. Murphy, Andrei Shleifer and Robert W. Vishny (1991), 'The Allocation of Talent: Implications for Growth', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 106 (2), May, 503-30 -- Mara Faccio (2006), 'Politically Connected Firms', American Economic Review, 96, March, 369-86 -- Raymond Fisman (2001), 'Estimating the Value of Political Connections', American Economic Review, 91 (4), September, 1095-102 -- Stijn Claessens, Erik Feijen and Luc Laeven (2008), 'Political Connections and Preferential Access to Finance: The Role of Campaign Contributions', Journal of Financial Economics, 88, 554-80
    Note: Includes bibliographical references , The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar
    ISBN: 9781785367076
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (2 v) , ill , cm
    Series Statement: The international library of entrepreneurship 11
    Series Statement: An Elgar reference collection
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als The political economy of entrepreneurship
    DDC: 338.04
    Keywords: Entrepreneurship ; Wirtschaftswissenschaft ; Entrepreneurship ; Entrepreneurship ; Electronic books ; Entrepreneurship
    Abstract: Political economy has been at the core of entrepreneurship research since its conception. Although the entrepreneur is frequently regarded as the key figure in the capitalist system, academic research in economics has for a long time overlooked the entrepreneur in its analyses of growth. In terms of political economy this neglect has been even more glaring. These volumes bring together the most important contributions from a very scattered and disparate research field. The collection provides scholars, postgraduates, and students of economics and entrepreneurship with a systematic exposition of a largely undefined field of research
    Abstract: Giorgio Bellettini and Gianmarco I.P. Ottaviano (2005), 'Special Interests and Technological Change', Review of Economic Studies, 72 (1), January, 43-56 -- Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (2000), 'Political Losers as a Barrier to Economic Development', American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings, 90 (2), May, 126-30 -- Césaire A. Meh (2005), 'Entrepreneurship, Wealth Inequality and Taxation', Review of Economic Dynamics, 8, 688-719 -- Vincenzo Quadrini (2000), 'Entrepreneurship, Saving and Social Mobility', Review of Economic Dynamics, 3, 1-40 -- Douglas Holtz-Eakin, Harvey S. Rosen and Robert Weathers (2000), 'Horatio Alger Meets the Mobility Tables', Small Business Economics, 14, 243-74 -- John McMillan and Christopher Woodruff (2002), 'The Central Role of Entrepreneurs in Transition Economies', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 16 (3), Summer, 153-70 -- Alberto Chilosi (2001), 'Entrepreneurship and Transition', MOCT-MOST: Economic Policy in Transitional Economies, 11, 327-57 -- David Smallbone and Friederike Welter (2001), 'The Role of Government in SME Development in Transition Economies', International Small Business Journal, 19 (4), July-September, 63-77 -- Hans-Werner Sinn (1996), 'Social Insurance, Incentives and Risk Taking', International Tax and Public Finance, 3 (3), 259-80 -- Pekka Ilmakunnas and Vesa Kanniainen (2001), 'Entrepreneurship, Economic Risks and Risk Insurance in the Welfare State: Results with OECD Data 1978-93', German Economic Review, 2 (3), 195-218 -- Magnus Henrekson (2005), 'Entrepreneurship: A Weak Link in the Welfare State?', Industrial and Corporate Change, 14 (3), 437-67
    Abstract: Recommended readings (Machine generated): William J. Baumol (2002), 'Independent Innovation in History: Productive Entrepreneurship and the Rule of Law', in The Free-Market Innovation Machine: Analyzing the Growth Miracle of Capitalism, Chapter 5, Princeton, NJ and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 55-72, references 3 -- Joseph A. Schumpeter ([1942] 1950), 'Crumbling Walls', in Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, Chapter XII, London: Allen & Unwin, 131-42 -- Joseph A. Schumpeter (1983), 'American Institutions and Economic Progress', Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, 139 (2), June, 191-6 -- Israel M. Kirzner (1985), 'The Primacy of Entrepreneurial Discovery', in Discovery and the Capitalist Process, Chapter 2, Chicago, IL and London: University of Chicago Press, 15-39, notes 40 -- Tony Fu-Lai Yu (2001), 'An Entrepreneurial Perspective of Institutional Change', Constitutional Political Economy, 12 (3), September, 217-36 -- Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson (2006), 'De Facto Political Power and Institutional Persistence', American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings, 96 (2), May, 325-30 -- Bruce L. Benson (2004), 'Opportunities Forgone: The Unmeasurable Costs of Regulation', Journal of Private Enterprise, XIX (2), Spring, 1-25 -- Magnus Henrekson and Ulf Jakobsson (2001), 'Where Schumpeter was Nearly Right - The Swedish Model and Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy', Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 11, 331-58 -- Hernando de Soto (2000), 'The Mystery of Capital', in The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else, Chapter 3, New York, NY: Basic Books, 39-67, notes 147 -- Simon Johnson, John McMillan and Christopher Woodruff (2002), 'Property Rights and Finance', American Economic Review, 92 (5), December, 1335-56 -- Francisco M. Gonzalez (2005), 'Insecure Property and Technological Backwardness', Economic Journal, 115 (505), July, 703-21 -- Wei Fan and Michelle J. White (2003), 'Personal Bankruptcy and the Level of Entrepreneurial Activity', Journal of Law and Economics, XLVI (2), October, 543-67 -- Evsey D. Domar and Richard A. Musgrave (1944), 'Proportional Income Taxation and Risk-Taking', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 58 (3), May, 388-422 -- S.M. Kanbur (1981), 'Risk Taking and Taxation: An Alternative Perspective', Journal of Public Economics, 15, 163-84 -- Martin T. Robson and Colin Wren (1999), 'Marginal and Average Tax Rates and the Incentive for Self-Employment', Southern Economic Journal, 65 (4), April, 757-73 -- Christian Keuschnigg and Soren Bo Nielsen (2002), 'Tax Policy, Venture Capital and Entrepreneurship', Journal of Public Economics, 87, 175-203 -- Donald Bruce and Mohammed Mohsin (2006), 'Tax Policy and Entrepreneurship: New Time Series Evidence', Small Business Economics, 26, 409-25 -- Donald Bruce (2000), 'Effects of the United States Tax System on Transitions into Self-Employment', Labour Economics, 7, 545-74 -- Simon C. Parker (2003), 'Does Tax Evasion Affect Occupational Choice?', Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 65 (3), July, 379-94
    Abstract: William M. Gentry and R. Glenn Hubbard (2000), 'Tax Policy and Entrepreneurial Entry', American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings, 90 (2), May, 283-7 -- Robert Carroll, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, Mark Rider and Harvey S. Rosen (2000), 'Income Taxes and Entrepreneurs' Use of Labor', Journal of Labor Economics, 18 (2), April, 324-51 -- William G. Gale (1991), 'Economic Effects of Federal Credit Programs', American Economic Review, 81 (1), March, 133-52 -- David de Meza (2002), 'Overlending?', Economic Journal, 112, February, F17-F31 -- Christian Keuschnigg and Søren Bo Nielsen (2001), 'Public Policy for Venture Capital', International Tax and Public Finance, 8, 557-72 -- Wenli Li (1998), 'Government Loan, Guarantee and Grant Programs: An Evaluation', Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly, 84 (4), Fall, 25-51 -- Brett Anitra Gilbert, David B. Audretsch and Patricia P. McDougall (2004), 'The Emergence of Entrepreneurship Policy', Small Business Economics, 22 (3/4), April/May, 313-23 -- Douglas Holtz-Eakin (2000), 'Public Policy Toward Entrepreneurship', Small Business Economics, 15, 283-91 -- Josh Lerner (1999), 'The Government as Venture Capitalist: The Long-Run Impact of the SBIR Program', Journal of Business, 72 (3), July, 285-318 -- Colin Wren and David J. Storey (2002), 'Evaluating the Effect of Soft Business Support upon Small Firm Performance', Oxford Economic Papers, 54, 334-65 -- Douglas J. Cumming and Jeffrey G. MacIntosh (2006), 'Crowding Out Private Equity: Canadian Evidence', Journal of Business Venturing, 21, 569-609 -- Randall G. Holcombe (2002), 'Political Entrepreneurship and the Democratic Allocation of Economic Resources', Review of Austrian Economics, 15 (2/3), 143-59 -- Michael Wohlgemuth (2000), 'Political Entrepreneurship and Bidding for Political Monopoly', Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 10, 273-95 -- George J. Stigler (1971), 'The Theory of Economic Regulation', Bell Journal of Economics and Management Science, 2 (1), Spring, 3-21 -- Daron Acemoglu and Thierry Verdier (1998), 'Property Rights, Corruption and the Allocation of Talent: A General Equilibrium Approach', Economic Journal, 108, September, 1381-403 -- Konstantin Sonin (2003), 'Why the Rich May Favor Poor Protection of Property Rights', Journal of Comparative Economics, 31, 715-31 -- Jesper Roine (2006), 'The Political Economics of Not Paying Taxes', Public Choice, 126, 107-34 -- Joel Mokyr (2000), 'Innovation and its Enemies: The Economic and Political Roots of Technological Inertia', in Mancur Olson (ed) and Satu Kähkönen (ed) (eds), A Not-So-Dismal Science, Chapter 2, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 61-91 -- Per Krusell and José-Víctor Ríos-Rull (2002), 'Politico-Economic Transition', Review of Economic Design, 7, 309-29
    Note: Includes bibliographical references , The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar
    ISBN: 9781785366499
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xxvii, 724 p) , cm
    Series Statement: The international library of entrepreneurship 12
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Financing entrepreneurship
    DDC: 338.04
    RVK:
    Keywords: Unternehmensfinanzierung ; Entrepreneurship ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Entrepreneurship ; Unternehmensgründung ; Finanzierung
    Abstract: This important collection comprises 24 previously published papers. These include foundational papers which offer an understanding of the conceptual and historical substructure of entrepreneurial finance and more recent seminal works about entrepreneurs and the obstacles that they systematically seek to overcome. Further articles describe the variety of institutional forms that have evolved to address the challenges inherent in entrepreneurial finance and the role of government in the process of innovation, entrepreneurship and the financing of new ventures. These papers, complemented by the editors' comprehensive introduction, are essential for scholars, researchers, policymakers and entrepreneurs wishing to advance their understanding of this important and expanding field of study
    Abstract: Jay R. Ritter and Ivo Welch (2002), 'A Review of IPO Activity, Pricing, and Allocations', Journal of Finance, LVII (4), August, 1795-828 -- Richard Zeckhauser (1996), 'The Challenge of Contracting for Technological Information', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 93 (23), November, 12743-8 -- Samuel Kortum and Josh Lerner (2000), 'Assessing the Contribution of Venture Capital to Innovation', RAND Journal of Economics, 31 (4), Winter, 674-92 -- Josh Lerner (2002), 'When Bureaucrats Meet Entrepreneurs: The Design of Effective "Public Venture Capital" Programmes', Economic Journal, 112, February, F73-F84 -- Bronwyn H. Hall (2002), 'The Financing of Research and Development', Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 18 (1), Spring, 35-51
    Abstract: Recommended readings (Machine generated): Frank H. Knight (1921), 'Enterprise and Profit', in Risk, Uncertainty and Profit, Part III, Chapters 9 and 10, Boston, MA, USA: Houghton Mifflin Company, 264-312 -- Joseph A. Schumpeter (1949), 'Economic Theory and Entrepreneurial History', in Change and the Entrepreneur: Postulates and Patterns for Entrepreneurial History, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 63-84 -- Edward P. Lazear (2005), 'Entrepreneurship', Journal of Labor Economics, 23 (4), October, 649-80 -- Paul Gompers, Josh Lerner and David Scharfstein (2005), 'Entrepreneurial Spawning: Public Corporations and the Genesis of New Ventures, 1986 to 1999', Journal of Finance, LX (2), April, 577-614 -- David B. Audretsch and Paula E. Stephan (1996), 'Company-Scientist Locational Links: The Case of Biotechnology', American Economic Review, 86 (3), June, 641-52 -- Allen N. Berger and Gregory F. Udell (1998), 'The Economics of Small Business Finance: The Roles of Private Equity and Debt Markets in the Financial Growth Cycle', Journal of Banking and Finance, 22, August, 613-73 -- Douglas Holtz-Eakin, David Joulfaian and Harvey S. Rosen (1994), 'Sticking It Out: Entrepreneurial Survival and Liquidity Constraints', Journal of Political Economy, 102 (1), February, 53-75 -- R. Glenn Hubbard (1998), 'Capital-Market Imperfections and Investment', Journal of Economic Literature, XXXVI (1), March, 193-225 -- Raghuram G. Rajan and Luigi Zingales (1995), 'What Do We Know about Capital Structure? Some Evidence from International Data', Journal of Finance, L (5), December, 1421-60 -- Robert E. Carpenter and Bruce C. Petersen (2002), 'Is the Growth of Small Firms Constrained by Internal Finance?', Review of Economics and Statistics, 84 (2), May, 298-309 -- Anuradha Basu and Simon C. Parker (2001), 'Family Finance and New Business Start-Ups', Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 63 (3), July, 333-58 -- Bernard S. Black and Ronald J. Gilson (1998), 'Venture Capital and the Structure of Capital Markets: Banks versus Stock Markets', Journal of Financial Economics, 47, March, 243-77 -- Carola Schenone (2004), 'The Effect of Banking Relationships on the Firm's IPO Underpricing', Journal of Finance, LIX (6), December, 2903-58 -- Jeremy Berkowitz and Michelle J. White (2004), 'Bankruptcy and Small Firms' Access to Credit', RAND Journal of Economics, 35 (1), Spring, 69-84 -- Naomi R. Lamoreaux, Margaret Levenstein and Kenneth L. Sokoloff (2007), 'Financing Invention during the Second Industrial Revolution: Cleveland, Ohio, 1870-1920', in Naomi R. Lamoreaux (ed) and Kenneth L. Sokoloff (ed) (eds), Financing Innovation in the United States, 1870 to the Present, Chapter 1, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 39-84 -- Paul Gompers and Josh Lerner (2001), 'The Venture Capital Revolution', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 15 (2), Spring, 145-68 -- Steven N. Kaplan and Per Stromberg (2003), 'Financial Contracting Theory Meets the Real World: An Empirical Analysis of Venture Capital Contracts', Review of Economic Studies, 70 (1), January, 281-315 -- Thomas Hellmann and Manju Puri (2002), 'Venture Capital and the Professionalization of Start-Up Firms: Empirical Evidence', Journal of Finance, LVII (1), February, 169-97 -- Philip E. Auerswald and Lewis M. Branscomb (2003), 'Valleys of Death and Darwinian Seas: Financing the Invention to Innovation Transition in the United States', Journal of Technology Transfer, 28, 227-39
    Note: Includes bibliographical references , The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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