 | Maria Minniti - Business & Economics - 2009 - 144 pages
Entrepreneurship is a human universal. All over the world, and throughout history, people have created businesses. Yet, although women make up more than 50 percent of the world ... | |
 | Joseph Alois Schumpeter - Business & Economics - 1934 - 255 pages
Schumpeter proclaims in this classical analysis of capitalist society first published in 1911 that economics is a natural self-regulating mechanism when undisturbed by "social ... | |
 | Robert F. Hébert, Albert N. Link - Business & Economics - 1988 - 178 pages
The term "entrepreneur," has a variety of meanings. Hebert and Link trace the historical roots of this diversity and propose an operational definition of entrepreneurship for ... | |
 | Amanda Brickman Elam - Business & Economics - 2008 - 122 pages
Amanda Elam proposes and tests an alternative view of entrepreneurship based on contemporary sociological theory. The resulting cross-national theory of gender and ... | |
 | Richard Cantillon - Business & Economics - 1931 - 188 pages
Richard Cantillon is one of the key figures in the early history of economics. He was certainly not the first to think about economic problems, but he was the first to have ... | |
 | Business & Economics - 2003 - 327 pages
. . . Shane s book is a fountain of knowledge and must-reading for everybody who tries to arrive at an integrated theory of entrepreneurship since the field is never isolated ... | |
 | Mark Casson - Business & Economics - 1982 - 418 pages
This thoroughly revised and updated new edition of Mark Casson's modern classic The Entrepreneur presents a novel synthesis of the ideas of Joseph Schumpeter, Frank Knight and ... | |
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