Schumpeter's plea
rediscovering history and relevance in the study of entrepreneurship
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Publication
2006 - Division of Research, Harvard Business School, Boston, Massachusetts
Language
English
Word Count
9,500 words, Guess
Page Count
38 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL57687464M
- OCLC Control Number64712250
Description
Joseph Schumpeter believed that history was essential to the study of entrepreneurship. It is a perspective that has been lost in recent scholarship. This paper shows why this has been detrimental to the field, and explores how the current situation can be improved. We begin by surveying the development of the social scientific literature on entrepreneurship since the field first emerged as an area of academic interest in the 1940s. We show that, despite theoretical agreement on the importance of context in the study of entrepreneurship, empirical research in recent years has ignored historical setting in favor of focusing on entrepreneurial behavior and cognition. The result has been a pre-occupation with high-tech start-ups in the United States, and growing irrelevance from the major issues in the contemporary global economy. The paper outlines ways in which the rediscovery of history can facilitate entrepreneurial studies, using examples from international entrepreneurship. We conclude by arguing that these methods can stimulate the kind of exchanges between the history and theory of entrepreneurship that Schumpeter envisioned.
Subjects
Series Statement
- Working paper / Division of Research, Harvard Business School -- 06-036
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