1st Edition

Contextualizing Entrepreneurship Theory

By Ted Baker, Friederike Welter Copyright 2020
    188 Pages
    by Routledge

    188 Pages
    by Routledge

    As the breadth and empirical diversity of entrepreneurship research have increased rapidly during the last decade, the quest to find a "one-size-fits-all" general theory of entrepreneurship has given way to a growing appreciation for the importance of contexts. This promises to improve both the practical relevance and the theoretical rigor of research in this field. Entrepreneurship means different things to different people at different times and in different places and both its causes and its consequences likewise vary. For example, for some people entrepreneurship can be a glorious path to emancipation, while for others it can represent the yoke tethering them to the burdens of overwork and drudgery. For some communities it can drive renaissance and vibrancy while for others it allows only bare survival. In this book, we assess and attempt to push forward contemporary conceptualizations of contexts that matter for entrepreneurship, pointing in particular to opportunities generating new insights by attending to contexts in novel or underexplored ways.



    This book shows that the ongoing contextualization of entrepreneurship research should not simply generate a proliferation of unique theories – one for every context – but can instead result in better theory construction, testing and understanding of boundary conditions, thereby leading us to richer and more profound understanding of entrepreneurship across its many forms.



    Contextualizing Entrepreneurship Theory will critically review the current debate and existing literature on contexts and entrepreneurship and use this to synthesize new theoretical and methodological frameworks that point to important directions for future research.

    Preface: Our journey towards contextualizing entrepreneurship theory

    Part I: Understanding contexts and entrepreneurship

    1. Why contexts play an ever-increasing role for entrepreneurship research
    2. Synthesizing the context debate in entrepreneurship research
    3. Part II: Theorizing contexts

    4. Constructing contexts: enacting, talking, seeing
    5. Problematizing, making choices and asking who our research serves
    6. Part III: Studying contexts

    7. Some heuristics for researchers embracing a Critical Process Approach
    8. Narrating and visualizing contexts
    9. Part IV: Going forward

    10. Why it’s hard to look back once you have embraced contexts

    Author Biographies

    Index

    Biography

    Ted Baker is George F. Farris Chair and Professor of Entrepreneurship at Rutgers Business School, Newark and New Brunswick, New Jersey, and Honorary Professor at the University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business.





    Friederike Welter is President and Managing Director of the Institut für Mittelstandsforschung (IfM) Bonn, and holds a professorship at University of Siegen, Germany.