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Handbook of Research on Entrepreneurship and Conflict
This Handbook focuses on the complex relationship between entrepreneurship and conflict. Editors Wim Naudé and Bernadette Power construct a broad overview of central research themes in the field, covering states being captured by entrepreneurs, states capturing businesses, entrepreneurship in post-conflict reconstruction, and entrepreneurs in conflict against other entrepreneurs.
More Information
Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
More Information
This Handbook focuses on the complex relationship between entrepreneurship and conflict. Editors Wim Naudé and Bernadette Power construct a broad overview of central research themes in the field, covering states being captured by entrepreneurs, states capturing businesses, entrepreneurship in post-conflict reconstruction, and entrepreneurs in conflict against other entrepreneurs.
Contributing authors analyze pragmatic evidence and academic literature to explore entrepreneurship and conflict from industry, country, and firm level perspectives. They consider conflict in the context of family business settings, the ways in which war entrepreneurship and military strategy influence long-term societal developments, and the role of entrepreneurship in peace-building. Ultimately, the Handbook warns against the dystopia that destructive digital entrepreneurship can cause, outlining the challenges it poses and advocating for institutional responses in order to ensure its regulation.
This Handbook is a fascinating read for researchers, scholars, and graduate students specializing in conflict studies, entrepreneurship studies, business and management, and politics and economics.
Contributing authors analyze pragmatic evidence and academic literature to explore entrepreneurship and conflict from industry, country, and firm level perspectives. They consider conflict in the context of family business settings, the ways in which war entrepreneurship and military strategy influence long-term societal developments, and the role of entrepreneurship in peace-building. Ultimately, the Handbook warns against the dystopia that destructive digital entrepreneurship can cause, outlining the challenges it poses and advocating for institutional responses in order to ensure its regulation.
This Handbook is a fascinating read for researchers, scholars, and graduate students specializing in conflict studies, entrepreneurship studies, business and management, and politics and economics.
Critical Acclaim
‘There are two important new trends in entrepreneurship. First, how different forms of entrepreneurship contribute to, or undermine, economic welfare and second the impact of rising conflict, globally and locally. This long overdue Handbook – edited by real experts in the field -convincingly comes to grips with both.’
– Saul Estrin, London School of Economics, UK
‘Conflicts seem to dominate these days, in many ways. This observation gives ample room to think about the role of entrepreneurship against the background of all these conflicts. This Handbook is an indispensable source for that purpose. Dr. Wim Naudé and Dr. Bernadette Power have composed a great edited book about this subject, really a must-read in the field of entrepreneurship.’
– Enno Masurel, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands
In an era rife with conflict throughout every level of society, this pathbreaking Handbook paves important new ground in analyzing how entrepreneurship can be both a positive response but also a concerning trigger for conflict. This Handbook draws on a broad-spectrum of expert authors spanning a diverse range of backgrounds and scholarly fields to shed new light on the links between entrepreneurship and conflict. This is a must read not just for entrepreneurship scholarship but for all of the social sciences and thought leaders concerned with the stability and sustainability of democratic society.’
– David B Audretsch, Indiana University, US
– Saul Estrin, London School of Economics, UK
‘Conflicts seem to dominate these days, in many ways. This observation gives ample room to think about the role of entrepreneurship against the background of all these conflicts. This Handbook is an indispensable source for that purpose. Dr. Wim Naudé and Dr. Bernadette Power have composed a great edited book about this subject, really a must-read in the field of entrepreneurship.’
– Enno Masurel, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands
In an era rife with conflict throughout every level of society, this pathbreaking Handbook paves important new ground in analyzing how entrepreneurship can be both a positive response but also a concerning trigger for conflict. This Handbook draws on a broad-spectrum of expert authors spanning a diverse range of backgrounds and scholarly fields to shed new light on the links between entrepreneurship and conflict. This is a must read not just for entrepreneurship scholarship but for all of the social sciences and thought leaders concerned with the stability and sustainability of democratic society.’
– David B Audretsch, Indiana University, US
Contributors
Contributors include: Sujana Adapa, José Ernesto Amorós, Jurgen Brauer, Graham Brownlow, Tilman Brück, Sameeksha Desai, Michaël Distelmans, Jörg Freiling, Noemi Giampaoli, Jay Joseph, Matthew McCaffrey, Topher McDougal, Maria Minniti, Wim Naudé, Eoin O’Leary, Bernadette Power, Jane Power, Matteo Renghini, Geraldine Ryan, Ilse Scheerlinck, Erik Stam, Aleksander Surdej, Driss Tsouli, Harry Van Buren III, Hubert P. van Tuyll, Subba Reddy Yarram
Contents
Contents
Preface vii
List of contributors viii
PART I INTRODUCTION
1 Introduction and overview of the Handbook 2
Wim Naudé and Bernadette Power
PART II THEORIES
2 Is productive entrepreneurship getting scarcer? A reflection on the
contemporary relevance of Baumol’s typology of entrepreneurship 18
Maria Minniti, Wim Naudé, and Erik Stam
3 (Un) productive entrepreneurship in a predatory state 45
Sameeksha Desai
4 A theory of entrepreneurship and peacebuilding 57
Harry Van Buren III and Jay Joseph
PART III HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
5 Entrepreneurship of, in, and through war: the West in the last millennium 73
Hubert P. van Tuyll and Jurgen Brauer
6 Classical Chinese military strategy as unproductive entrepreneurship 89
Matthew McCaffrey
PART IV GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES
7 State-based armed conflict and entrepreneurship: empirical evidence 106
Wim Naudé, José Ernesto Amorós and Tilman Brück
8 Terrorism: the impact on entrepreneurship 145
Driss Tsouli
9 Integrating culturally distant immigrant entrepreneurs: dimensions of conflict 167
Jörg Freiling
PART V COUNTRY AND REGIONAL PERSPECTIVES
10 Rent-seeking and economic development in Ireland 179
Eoin O’Leary
11 Entrepreneurship and recovery in Northern Ireland 191
Graham Brownlow
PART VI FIRM, INDUSTRY AND HOUSEHOLD LEVEL PERSPECTIVES
12 Manufacturing mayhem: the violence entrepreneurs of the US firearms industry 209
Topher L. McDougal
13 How disruptive businesses trigger conflicts with incumbents: the case
of ridesharing in Brussels 226
Michaël Distelmans and llse Scheerlinck
14 Equity investors and entrepreneurs: a conflict perspective 237
Jane Power, Bernadette Power and Geraldine Ryan
15 Family business succession: fertile environments for conflict?
A bibliometric and content analysis 264
Aleksander Surdej, Matteo Renghini and Noemi Giampaoli
16 Family business, owner-managers, ethnicity and conflict in Malaysia 280
Sujana Adapa and Subba Reddy Yarram
PART VII A DIGITAL PERSPECTIVE
17 Destructive digital entrepreneurship 292
Wim Naudé
Preface vii
List of contributors viii
PART I INTRODUCTION
1 Introduction and overview of the Handbook 2
Wim Naudé and Bernadette Power
PART II THEORIES
2 Is productive entrepreneurship getting scarcer? A reflection on the
contemporary relevance of Baumol’s typology of entrepreneurship 18
Maria Minniti, Wim Naudé, and Erik Stam
3 (Un) productive entrepreneurship in a predatory state 45
Sameeksha Desai
4 A theory of entrepreneurship and peacebuilding 57
Harry Van Buren III and Jay Joseph
PART III HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
5 Entrepreneurship of, in, and through war: the West in the last millennium 73
Hubert P. van Tuyll and Jurgen Brauer
6 Classical Chinese military strategy as unproductive entrepreneurship 89
Matthew McCaffrey
PART IV GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES
7 State-based armed conflict and entrepreneurship: empirical evidence 106
Wim Naudé, José Ernesto Amorós and Tilman Brück
8 Terrorism: the impact on entrepreneurship 145
Driss Tsouli
9 Integrating culturally distant immigrant entrepreneurs: dimensions of conflict 167
Jörg Freiling
PART V COUNTRY AND REGIONAL PERSPECTIVES
10 Rent-seeking and economic development in Ireland 179
Eoin O’Leary
11 Entrepreneurship and recovery in Northern Ireland 191
Graham Brownlow
PART VI FIRM, INDUSTRY AND HOUSEHOLD LEVEL PERSPECTIVES
12 Manufacturing mayhem: the violence entrepreneurs of the US firearms industry 209
Topher L. McDougal
13 How disruptive businesses trigger conflicts with incumbents: the case
of ridesharing in Brussels 226
Michaël Distelmans and llse Scheerlinck
14 Equity investors and entrepreneurs: a conflict perspective 237
Jane Power, Bernadette Power and Geraldine Ryan
15 Family business succession: fertile environments for conflict?
A bibliometric and content analysis 264
Aleksander Surdej, Matteo Renghini and Noemi Giampaoli
16 Family business, owner-managers, ethnicity and conflict in Malaysia 280
Sujana Adapa and Subba Reddy Yarram
PART VII A DIGITAL PERSPECTIVE
17 Destructive digital entrepreneurship 292
Wim Naudé