Critical Perspectives on Entrepreneurship questions the accepted norms and dominant assumptions of entrepreneurship scholarship. It explores how entrepreneurship study tends to privilege certain forms of economic action, while implying other more collective forms of organization and exchange are somehow problematic. Deconstructing assumptions and providing space for alternative visions, this book engages openly with the contradictions, and tensions at the heart of entrepreneurship. It will be of interest to entrepreneurship researchers, advanced students and policy-makers as well as scholars of critical management studies.
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This is an excellent book. Critical studies are gaining ground in the entrepreneurship field; and this edited volume provides a much needed overview that challenges our thinking on what constitutes entrepreneurship and why. The chapters highlight the value of critically reviewing well-known phenomena such as minority, ethnic, indigenous entrepreneurship, social entrepreneurship, gender and entrepreneurship. The editors have done a superb job in assembling such knowledgeable contributors. A must read for all of us interested in the contribution critical perspectives can make to entrepreneurship research.
Friederike Welter, Institut für Mittelstandsforschung Bonn, and University of Siegen, Germany.
The coming of Essers, Dey, Tedmanson and Verduyn's excellent collection is in itself a manifesto for the strength of critical entrepreneurship studies. As contributions to this field, each and every chapter voices entrepreneurship as a social change activity capable of speaking back, explicitly or implicitly, to what the 'entrepreneur' of neoliberalism attempts to conceal. At the same time, each chapter articulates a whole other world of possibilities. A 'must read' to act upon!
Marta B. Calás, Professor of Organization Studies and International Management, University of Massachusetts, USA
Adopting a proactive stance for highlighting new critiques and contexts of entrepreneurship, this thought-provoking collection of critical narratives discusses entrepreneurship as a social change activity. With an interest in non-traditional entrepreneurial activities, this authoritative volume advances critical scholarship and fosters a new agenda for entrepreneurship research in the coming decade.
Denise Fletcher, Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Friederike Welter, Institut für Mittelstandsforschung Bonn, and University of Siegen, Germany.
The coming of Essers, Dey, Tedmanson and Verduyn's excellent collection is in itself a manifesto for the strength of critical entrepreneurship studies. As contributions to this field, each and every chapter voices entrepreneurship as a social change activity capable of speaking back, explicitly or implicitly, to what the 'entrepreneur' of neoliberalism attempts to conceal. At the same time, each chapter articulates a whole other world of possibilities. A 'must read' to act upon!
Marta B. Calás, Professor of Organization Studies and International Management, University of Massachusetts, USA
Adopting a proactive stance for highlighting new critiques and contexts of entrepreneurship, this thought-provoking collection of critical narratives discusses entrepreneurship as a social change activity. With an interest in non-traditional entrepreneurial activities, this authoritative volume advances critical scholarship and fosters a new agenda for entrepreneurship research in the coming decade.
Denise Fletcher, Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation, University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg