What is it about?

The aim of this paper is to contest the ideologically driven depiction of the entrepreneur as a heroic icon of capitalist culture. To do this, a 2006 survey involving face-to-face interviews with 331 entrepreneurs in Ukraine is reported.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

This displays that the vast majority do not conform to the depiction of the entrepreneur as a heroic icon of capitalism; just 8% of the Ukrainian entrepreneurs surveyed are engaged purely in profit-driven entrepreneurship in the legitimate economy. The vast majority of entrepreneurs either do not pursue purely profit-driven goals and adopt social motives to varying degrees, and/or operate wholly or partially beyond the legitimate economy. In doing so, this study reveals that entrepreneurship and the enterprise culture can no longer be taken as signifying the transition to a capitalist economy in this post-Soviet space. Instead, its multiple forms are here argued to open up entrepreneurship to re-signification as demonstrative of the feasibility of alternative economic futures in post-Soviet spaces beyond an immutable and inevitable legitimate profit-driven capitalist economy.

Perspectives

Contests the popular view of entrepreneurs as heroic icons of capitalist culture

Professor Colin C Williams
University of Sheffield

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Beyond the Entrepreneur as a Heroic Icon of Capitalist Culture: Some Lessons from Ukraine, Debatte Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, April 2013, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/0965156x.2013.830041.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page