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New England Journal of Entrepreneurship

2015

Entrepreneurship

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From The Editor, Spring/Fall 2015, Grace Guo Jan 2015

From The Editor, Spring/Fall 2015, Grace Guo

New England Journal of Entrepreneurship

No abstract provided.


New England Journal Of Entrepreneurship, Spring/Fall 2015 Jan 2015

New England Journal Of Entrepreneurship, Spring/Fall 2015

New England Journal of Entrepreneurship

No abstract provided.


New England Journal Of Entrepreneurship, Special Issue 2015 Jan 2015

New England Journal Of Entrepreneurship, Special Issue 2015

New England Journal of Entrepreneurship

No abstract provided.


The Differing Impact Of Household Income On Firm Emergence By Heterogeneous Start-Up Configuration, Enrique Nunez Jan 2015

The Differing Impact Of Household Income On Firm Emergence By Heterogeneous Start-Up Configuration, Enrique Nunez

New England Journal of Entrepreneurship

Using the Panel Study of Entrepreneurial Dynamics II dataset, we examine the role that household income plays in the emergence of consumer-oriented start-ups by individual (solo), family-based (family), and non-family based start-ups (team). In particular, we address the research question: Does household income impact firm emergence, and if so, is emergence impacted differently based on start-up configuration? Our results indicate that household income does have a significant impact on average firm emergence, as well as on emergence growth rates for solo and family firms, playing an especially significant role for family firms. Furthermore, we found that household income is not …


A Gender Integrative Conceptualization Of Entrepreneurship, Susan Clark Muntean, Banu Ozkazanc-Pan Jan 2015

A Gender Integrative Conceptualization Of Entrepreneurship, Susan Clark Muntean, Banu Ozkazanc-Pan

New England Journal of Entrepreneurship

Guided by feminist perspectives, we critique existing approaches to the study of women’s entrepreneurship on epistemological grounds and suggest that the entrepreneurship field needs to recognize gendered assumptions in theorizing. Deploying a feminist framework, we suggest that understanding the “gender gap” in entrepreneurship requires focus on institutional and structural barriers women entrepreneurs face. Existing studies of women entrepreneurs often compare women with men without considering how gender and gender relations impact the very concepts and ideas of entrepreneurship. We propose, therefore, a conceptualization of entrepreneurship that illuminates gender bias and calls attention to the interrelated individual, institutional, and structural barriers …