Read more
In this broad-based, imaginative and challenging volume by front-runners in the domain of immigrant and refugee entrepreneurship, Ivan Light, Leo-Paul Dana and Didier Chabaud contribute a near boundless magnitude to our understanding of this realm of scholarship, agency, endurance, and survivorship. Their insights into the saliency of these forms of collective effort are as impressive as they are persuasive. Seven Gold, Department of Sociology, Michigan State University.
This book holds significant academic merit and also serves as an essential tool for policymakers, scholars, and anyone keen on understanding the deep influence of immigrant entrepreneurship on global society. Additionally, it celebrates the relentless spirit of immigrant entrepreneurs who persistently foster innovation and drive transformative changes within their communities. Thomas Cooney, College of Business, Technological University Dublin
List of contents
.- Return to the Azores..- The changing face of immigrant entrepreneurship- the case of Germany..- The rise of transnational migrant entrepreneurship: A Practice Theory Approach..- History of Theory..- Jewish Immigrant entrepreneurs in Late-Renaissance Italy..- Ethnicity, entrepreneurship and identity among German-Turkish business people in Berlin..- Economic Value, Social Values and the Firm: Towards a Heuristic Framework.
About the author
Ivan Light is Professor emeritus of sociology at the University of California, Los Angeles. His Ethnic Enterprise in America pioneered the subject of immigrant and ethnic minority business ownership. He has subsequently written 35 articles and five books on this subject, most recently Entrepreneurs and Capitalism Since Luther (with Léo-Paul Dana).
Léo-Paul Dana is Visiting Professor at Université Paris 1, Pantheon Sorbonne, France, and is also associated with the Chaire ETI at Sorbonne Business School. As well, he holds the title of Professor at Dalhousie University. A graduate of McGill University and HEC-Montreal, he has served as Marie Curie Fellow at Princeton University.
Didier Chabaud is Professor of entrepreneurship at IAE Paris Sorbonne Business School, Past-President of French Academy of entrepreneurship and innovation, co-editor-in-chief of Revue de l’entrepreneuriat (A in French national HCERES ranking ), and author or co-author of over 100 articles in peer-reviewed journals, chapters or books. He works mainly on venturing processes (creation, teams and social networks, business support), on the strategies of family firms, and on the impact of institutions and culture on entrepreneurship.
Summary
In this broad-based, imaginative and challenging volume by front-runners in the domain of immigrant and refugee entrepreneurship, Ivan Light, Leo-Paul Dana and Didier Chabaud contribute a near boundless magnitude to our understanding of this realm of scholarship, agency, endurance, and survivorship. Their insights into the saliency of these forms of collective effort are as impressive as they are persuasive. Seven Gold, Department of Sociology, Michigan State University.
This book holds significant academic merit and also serves as an essential tool for policymakers, scholars, and anyone keen on understanding the deep influence of immigrant entrepreneurship on global society. Additionally, it celebrates the relentless spirit of immigrant entrepreneurs who persistently foster innovation and drive transformative changes within their communities. Thomas Cooney, College of Business, Technological University Dublin
“History, Cases, and Frontiers.” That subtitle explains exactly what this remarkable book provides. The history section offers a depth of understanding that literature reviews cannot match. The cases assemble all the evidence now available regarding immigrant and refugee entrepreneurship in Europe, and the frontiers section takes readers to the boundary of theoretically informed current research. A glossary eases access for newcomers. It all amounts to a one-stop complete education that fills gaps in the knowledge of experienced researchers and enables others quickly to attain qualification. Marina Dabić, Faculty of Economics and Business, University of Zagreb
A carefully crafted volume with thoughtful case studies that capture the nuances of the complexity, diversity, changing patterns, and impacts of immigrant and refugee entrepreneurship. Min Zhou, Department of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles