Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
1. Technology Based Nascent Entrepreneurship: Some Implications for Economic Policy Making and Markers; James A. Cunningham and Conor O'Kane2.The Role of Public Policy in Fostering Technology Based Nascent Entrepreneurship; Donald F. Kuratko and Matthias Menter3. The Next of Ecosystems, Strategic Orientations, and Higher Education with Technology Based Nascent Entrepreneurship; Maribel Guerrero, David Urbano, and Fernando Herrera4. Nascent Entrepreneurship and Territorial Social Capital: Empirical Evidences from Italy; Marco Romano, Melita Nicotra, and Carmel Schillaci5. Re-entry Following Firm Failure: Nascent Technology Entrepreneurs' Tactics for Avoiding and Overcoming Stigma; Grace Walsh6. Technology Based Nascent Entrepreneurship and Ethnic Migrants: Exploring the Influence of Cultural Distance through the Forms of Capital Model; Hamizah Abd. Hamid, Conor O'Kane, and Andr M. Everett7. The University as a Catalyst for Nascent Technology Entrepreneurial Leadership: Towards a Sustainable Model; Michele Rusk8. Between a Soft Landing and a Hard Place: How Silicon Valley Software and Life Sciences Business Incubators Facilitate Learning; Marijn A. van Weele and Frank J. van Rijnsoever9. University Researchers as Nascent Entrepreneurs: Do they Fit the Stereotype?; Sally Davenport, Dominik Mann and Urs Daellenbach10. Nascent Technology Entrepreneurs New Venture Formation Activities; Clare Gately and James A. Cunningham.11. Nascent Student Entrepreneurship; Regina Maniam and Andr M. Everett12. Technology Nascent Entrepreneur Experiences of Start-Up Competition Participation; Kayleigh Watson and Pauric McGowan
Synopsis
This edited volume presents new means of quantifying the behavioral and consequential differences between technology-based and non-technology-based nascent entrepreneurs in varied economies. It explores the socioeconomic place of technology in developed and developing countries, and describes the implications of this research for policymakers' ability to identify and support new areas of economic growth. This book also examines technology-based nascent entrepreneurship issues in the context of entrepreneurial leadership, business incubation, ethnic migrants, university researchers, new venture formation activities, student entrepreneurship, and start-up competitions. The contributors to this collection provide valuable insights for the growing study of and expanding policies addressing nascent entrepreneurship.