Entrepreneurial Ecosystems
Based on extensive fieldwork, this book demonstrates how gender is an organizing principle of entrepreneurial ecosystems and makes a difference in how ecosystem resources are assembled and how they can be accessed. By bringing visibility to how ecosystem actors are heterogeneous across identities, interactions and experiences, the book highlights the role and complexity of individual, organizational, and institutional factors working in concert to create and maintain gendered inequities. Entrepreneurial Ecosystems provides research-driven insights around effective organizational practices and policies aimed at remedying gendered and intersectional inequalities associated with entrepreneurship activities and economic growth. Proposing a typology of four ecosystem identities, it highlights how some might be more amenable and organized towards gender inclusion and change, while others may be much more difficult to change, reorganize and restructure. It offers scholars, students, practitioners and policymakers insights about gender in relation to analyzing entrepreneurial ecosystems and for fostering inclusive economic development policies.
- Proposes a gender-based analysis of entrepreneurial ecosystems
- Provides a multilevel framework for ecosystem research
- Provides a typology of ecosystems
Reviews & endorsements
'Starting with the assumption of ecosystem homogeneity, the authors explore gender across the multi-level elements of entrepreneurial ecosystems using insights from feminist scholarship. The book develops a typology of ecosystems reflecting the dynamic interactions of gender across levels, giving insights into how gender matters and providing new directions for theory development and research. A thoughtful and important read for anyone studying entrepreneurship.' Candida G. Brush, Franklin W. Olin Distinguished Chair of Entrepreneurship, Arthur M. Blank Center for Entrepreneurship, Babson College- Entrepreneurship Division
'Here is a timely, great, relevant book on entrepreneurial ecosystems as gendered phenomena, offering thoughts on effective organizational practices and policies aimed at remedying gendered inequalities. A must-read, not only for scholars, but also for practitioners and policy makers.' Karen Verduijn, Senior Lecturer in Entrepreneurship, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
'Prof Dr Banu Ozkazanc-Pan and Prof Dr Susan Clark Muntean offer a truly thought provoking view on how entrepreneurial ecosystems are highly gendered and racialized. This book excels in providing a critical, interdisciplinary as well as empirically grounded contribution to the field. Particularly its implications for in- and exclusion make it a must read for both scholars and policy makers.' Dr. Caroline Essers, Associate Professor Entrepreneurship & Leadership, Nijmegen School of Management, Radboud University
Product details
March 2024Paperback
9781009010498
264 pages
228 × 151 × 15 mm
0.41kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Entrepreneurial ecosystems:Â an overview
- 3. Understanding gender and inclusion in entrepreneurial ecosystems
- 4. Individual-level dynamics: beyond motivation, identity, and networks
- 5. Organizational-level dynamics:Â practices and policies
- 6. Institution-level dynamics:Â institutions and sociocultural gender norms
- 7. Intersectional analysis
- 8. Inclusive entrepreneurial ecosystems and economic development
- Index.