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Entrepreneurship [electronic resource] / Edited by Lisa Keister.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Research in the sociology of work ; v. 15, | Emerald ebookPublication details: Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2009.Description: 368 p. : illISBN:
  • 9781849503365
  • 1849503362
ISSN:
  • 02772833
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction. (L.A. Keister).-- Part I. Why Study Entrepreneurship? Entrepreneurship and Inequality. (S. Lippmann, A. Davis, H.E. Aldrich). Economic Freedom or Self-Imposed Strife: Work-Life Conflict, Gender, and Self-Employment. (J. Reynolds, L. Renzulli).-- Part II. The Entrepreneurship Process. Origins of Organizations: The Entrepreneurial Process. (M. Ruef). Technological Resources and New Firm Growth: A Comparison of Start-up and Adolescent Ventures. (S.A. Zahra, Bruce A. Kirchhoff). Management Paradigm Change in the United States: A Professional Autonomy Perspective. (B.C. Skaggs, K.T. Leicht). Upside-down Venture Capitalists and the Transition Toward Pyramidal Firms: Inevitable Progression, or Failed Experiment? (N. Wasserman). Entrepreneurship, Industrial Policy, and Clusters: The Growth of the North Carolina Wine Industry. (R. Saylor Breckenridge, I.M. Taplin).-- Part III. Context and Opportunities. Socializing the Ethnic Market: A Frame Analysis. (L. Corsino, M. Soto). The Henna Maker: A Moroccan Immigrant Woman Entrepreneur in an Ethnic Revival. (B. Mizrachi). Entrepreneurship and Self-Employment in Transition Economies. (A. Rona-Tas, M. Sagi). Entrepreneurial Strategies During Institutional Transitions. (M.W. Peng and Y. Jiang). Lineage Networks, Rural Entrepreneurs, and Max Weber. (Y. Peng).
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Introduction. (L.A. Keister).-- Part I. Why Study Entrepreneurship? Entrepreneurship and Inequality. (S. Lippmann, A. Davis, H.E. Aldrich). Economic Freedom or Self-Imposed Strife: Work-Life Conflict, Gender, and Self-Employment. (J. Reynolds, L. Renzulli).-- Part II. The Entrepreneurship Process. Origins of Organizations: The Entrepreneurial Process. (M. Ruef). Technological Resources and New Firm Growth: A Comparison of Start-up and Adolescent Ventures. (S.A. Zahra, Bruce A. Kirchhoff). Management Paradigm Change in the United States: A Professional Autonomy Perspective. (B.C. Skaggs, K.T. Leicht). Upside-down Venture Capitalists and the Transition Toward Pyramidal Firms: Inevitable Progression, or Failed Experiment? (N. Wasserman). Entrepreneurship, Industrial Policy, and Clusters: The Growth of the North Carolina Wine Industry. (R. Saylor Breckenridge, I.M. Taplin).-- Part III. Context and Opportunities. Socializing the Ethnic Market: A Frame Analysis. (L. Corsino, M. Soto). The Henna Maker: A Moroccan Immigrant Woman Entrepreneur in an Ethnic Revival. (B. Mizrachi). Entrepreneurship and Self-Employment in Transition Economies. (A. Rona-Tas, M. Sagi). Entrepreneurial Strategies During Institutional Transitions. (M.W. Peng and Y. Jiang). Lineage Networks, Rural Entrepreneurs, and Max Weber. (Y. Peng).

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