All Stories

  1. Growing a small firm; experiences and managing difficult processes
  2. Supplier-customer engagement for collaborative innovation using video conferencing: A study of SMEs
  3. Understanding how legitimacy is acquired among informal home-based Pakistani small businesses
  4. Enablers and Constraints of Female Entrepreneurship in Khyber Pukhtunkhawa, Pakistan: Institutional and Feminist Perspectives
  5. How the rural is presented in some rural entrepreneurship literature
  6. Inspired or Foolhardy: Sensemaking, Confidence and Entrepreneurs’ Decision-Making
  7. Identity, Enactment, and Entrepreneurship Engagement in a Declining Place
  8. Enterprising the rural; Creating a social value chain
  9. Towards an entrepreneurial theory of practice; emerging ideas for emerging economies
  10. Collaborating for innovation: the socialised management of knowledge
  11. The social status of entrepreneurs
  12. Entrepreneursheep and context: when entrepreneurship is greater than entrepreneurs
  13. Entrepreneurship as socially embedded
  14. Microfranchise emergence and its impact on entrepreneurship
  15. Broadband and the creative industries in rural Scotland
  16. Special Issue: “Parenthood and Entrepreneurship” Call for papers
  17. Entrepreneurship as re-sourcing
  18. Entrepreneurship as a community phenomenon; reconnecting meanings and place
  19. Family Entrepreneurship
  20. Rethinking Entrepreneurship
  21. Enterprise education with Chinese characteristics; policy, practices and uneven development in PRC
  22. The usefulness of broadband, and how ICT is used by rural creative small business
  23. Family entrepreneurship as a field of research: Exploring its contours and contents
  24. A review of research methods in entrepreneurship 1985-2013
  25. Embedded entrepreneurship in the creative re-construction of place
  26. is entrepreneurship a social or an economic phenomenon?
  27. Understanding the entrepreneurial learning process and its impact on students' personal development: A European perspective
  28. Understanding Entrepreneurship: Challenging Dominant Perspectives and Theorizing Entrepreneurship through New Postpositivist Epistemologies
  29. Entrepreneurship and mutuality: social capital in processes and practices
  30. The condition of smallness: how what it means to be small deters firms from getting bigger
  31. Innovation culture in small Tunisian ICT firms
  32. Enacting Entrepreneurship in ‘Informal’ Businesses
  33. Being in time and the family owned firm
  34. Trust formation processes in innovative collaborations
  35. differences in the appeal of entrepreneurship
  36. Innovation in small business: comparing face‐to‐face with virtual networking
  37. The process of entrepreneuring
  38. Perceived barriers towards the use of e‐trade processes by Korean SMEs
  39. Old fashioned or enlightened? Small retailers' practices in e-procurement
  40. The Tunisian textile industry: local responses to internationalisation
  41. Innovation culture and the economic performance of Tunisian ICT firms
  42. The university's role in developing Chinese entrepreneurship
  43. Innovation in services through learning in a joint venture
  44. The entrepreneur as hero and jester: Enacting the entrepreneurial discourse
  45. Self‐regulation: a strategic alternative for small firms?
  46. Enacting entrepreneurship as social value creation
  47. Knowledge sharing processes in Tunisian small ICT firms
  48. Understanding Opportunity in Social Entrepreneurship as Paradigm Interplay
  49. An entrepreneurial network evolving: Patterns of change
  50. Contextual influences and athlete attitudes to drugs in sport
  51. Ambivalence and ambiguity in social enterprise; narratives about values in reconciling purpose and practices
  52. Network practices and entrepreneurial growth
  53. Institutions and the shaping of different forms of entrepreneurship
  54. Visitor narratives: researching and illuminating actual destination experience
  55. Rural Small Businesses in Turbulent Times
  56. The Nature of Trust in Virtual Entrepreneurial Networks
  57. Entrepreneurs and the environment: towards a typology of Tunisian ecopreneurs
  58. The Attractiveness of Entrepreneurship for Females and Males in a Developing Arab Muslim Country; Entrepreneurial Intentions in Tunisia
  59. Establishing high-tech industry: The Tunisian ICT experience
  60. Social enterprise and effectiveness: a process typology
  61. Tanzanian Micro Enterprises and Micro Finance: The Role and Impact for Poor Rural Women
  62. The adoption of e-trade innovations by Korean small and medium sized firms
  63. Aggressors; Winners; Victims and Outsiders: European Schools' Social Construction of the Entrepreneur
  64. Market creation: the epitome of entrepreneurial marketing practices
  65. Research Practices in Entrepreneurship
  66. From tradition to modern
  67. ICT (information communication technology), peripherality and smaller hospitality businesses in Scotland
  68. Role typologies for enterprising education: the professional artisan?
  69. Change and the development of entrepreneurial networks over time: a processual perspective
  70. Excellence: capturing Aristotelian notions of meaning and purpose
  71. Organisational culture, national culture and performance in International Joint Ventures based in Israel
  72. Entrepreneurship
  73. The moral space in entrepreneurship: an exploration of ethical imperatives and the moral legitimacy of being enterprising
  74. Developments in Tourism Research
  75. Mumpsimus and the Mything of the Individualistic Entrepreneur
  76. Entrepreneurial Social Capital: Conceptualizing Social Capital in New High-tech Firms
  77. Tourists on Tourists: The Impact of Other People on Destination Experience
  78. The strategic farmer: a cheese producer with cold feet?
  79. Tourism, Security and Safety
  80. Marketing in high-tech start-ups: Overcoming the liability of newness in Israel
  81. Success in Israeli high-tech start-ups; Critical factors and process
  82. The Effect of Disaster on Peripheral Tourism Places and the Disaffection of Prospective Visitors
  83. Engineers learning to become entrepreneurs: stimulations and barriers in Israel
  84. Developing the entrepreneurial skills of farmers: some myths explored
  85. The Impacts of Foot and Mouth Disease on a Peripheral Tourism Area: The Role and Effect of Crisis Management
  86. Enacted Metaphor: The Theatricality of the Entrepreneurial Process
  87. ENTERPRISING WOMEN: GENDER AND MATURITY IN NEW VENTURE CREATION AND DEVELOPMENT
  88. The Role of Family Members In Entrepreneurial Networks: Beyond the Boundaries of the Family Firm
  89. News and Nuances of the Entrepreneurial Myth and Metaphor: Linguistic Games in Entrepreneurial Sense–Making and Sense–Giving
  90. Relationships, marketing and small business: an exploration of links in theory and practice
  91. Small tourist firms in rural areas: agility, vulnerability and survival in the face of crisis
  92. The nurturing and harvesting of a rural Greek network
  93. The Added Value of Virtue
  94. Social Structures and Entrepreneurial Networks
  95. Total quality management principles and practices in China
  96. The Increasing Role of Small Business in the Chinese Economy
  97. The evolution of agile manufacturing
  98. “Class matters”: human and social capital in the entrepreneurial process
  99. The effects of embeddedness on the entrepreneurial process
  100. The articulation of social capital in entrepreneurial networks: a glue or a lubricant?
  101. Scottish Entrepreneurial Networks in the International Context
  102. Configuration and reconfiguration - planning for uncertainty?
  103. Business strategies for entrepreneurial small firms
  104. THE PROTEAN ENTREPRENEUR: THE ENTREPRENEURIAL PROCESS AS FITTING SELF AND CIRCUMSTANCE
  105. entrepreneurship in a rural context
  106. The Production of Prestige
  107. Religion as an environmental influence on enterprise culture – The case of Britain in the 1980s
  108. Marketing landscapes: the social context
  109. Entrepreneurship education within the enterprise culture
  110. Entrepreneurial learning
  111. Risk, Uncertainty and the Entrepreneurial Vision
  112. Cultivating the Garden of Eden: environmental entrepreneuring
  113. Foreword
  114. Playing the Fool? An Aesthetic Performance of an Entrepreneurial Identity
  115. The devil is in the e-tale: forms and structures in the entrepreneurial narratives
  116. networking entrepreneur
  117. Recognizing Meaning: Semiotics in Entrepreneurial Research
  118. Daring to be Different: A Dialogue on the Problems of Getting Qualitative Research Published
  119. Introduction: Successful Entrepreneurship
  120. An introduction to the constant comparative technique
  121. Rigorous and methodological qualitative analysis
  122. Globalization, internationalization and the entrepreneurial responses of Tunisian clothing firms
  123. The role of family members in entrepreneurial networks: beyond the boundaries of the family firm
  124. Chapter 15 Success Factors for High-Tech Start Ups: Views and Lessons of Israeli ExpertsSchaul Chorev and Alistair AndersonSuccess Factors for High-Tech Start Ups: Views and Lessons of Israeli Experts
  125. Using the constant comparative technique to consider network change and evolution
  126. Social embeddedness in entrepreneurship research: the importance of context and community