Sub-theme 75: The Social Effects of Entrepreneurial Capitalism

Convenors:
Tim Weiss, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
Nevena Radoynovska, emlyon business school, France
Ignasi Martí, ESADE Business School, Spain
Session I: Thursday, July 04, 09:00 to 10:30, U7-P2-De Lillo
Welcome, Introduction & Panel
Session II: Thursday, July 04, 11:00 to 12:30, U7-P2-De Lillo
Scoping out Entrepreneurialism
Christina Lubinski
Entrepreneurialism: A conceptual exploration
Anders Krabbe, Zlatko Bodrožić and Rasmus Koss Hartmann
The ascendance and decline of entrepreneurialism: A neo-Schumpeterian interpretation
Lauren Eaton
Capitalising on disruption: Evolving entrepreneurial discourse in the business press
Agata Kapturkiewicz and Heli Helanummi-Cole
From job creation to work in entrepreneurial ecosystems: A cross-disciplinary review and holistic framework for future research
Session III: Thursday, July 04, 14:00 to 15:30, U7-P2-De Lillo
Breaking Through or Reproducing Inequalities?
Bruno Noisette
Youth and entrepreneurship: Arranged or forced marriage? A reflection on social conceptions of “youth” and their implication for entrepreneurship
Paul M. Bedford, Andrew W. Crane and Kostas Iatridis
Identity work among activist entrepreneurs
Caroline Demeyère and Elina Meliou
“Not like other women”: How does the “Exception” reproduce gender inequality in entrepreneurship?
Veselina Stoyanova and Stoyan Stoyanov
Tech-driven inclusivity: AI strategies for migrant entrepreneurs’ embeddedness in the host country context
Session IV: Friday, July 05, 09:00 to 10:30, U7-P2-De Lillo
Entrepreneurship Discourse & Its Imaginaries – Part I
Nicolai C. Jepsen
Hustle: Entrepreneurial rhetoric in the gig economy
Janice Byrne
The can(cer)preneur: Media representation of breast cancer entrepreneurs
Alexander Elg
Building European exceptionalism: Tracing social imaginaries of European industrial policy
Federica Fusaro
A discourse analysis of the adoption of inclusionary entrepreneurship policies in France
Session V: Friday, July 05, 11:00 to 12:30, U7-P2-De Lillo
Entrepreneurship Discourse & Its Imaginaries – Part II
Justine Buriller
Reimagining entrepreneurial growth. The case of entrepreneurs’ narratives in the sustainable fashion industry
Niki Khorasani and Madeline Toubiana
Designing entrepreneurial opportunities for alternative imaginaries
Seungah S. Lee
The myth of ‘entrepreneurship for all’: How university-based incubators become a site of reckoning for young, aspiring entrepreneurs
Benjamin Huybrechts, Federica Fusaro and Nevena Radoynovska
“Everyone can become an entrepreneur”: How entrepreneurship myths affect emancipatory trajectories at a French incubator for marginalized individuals
Session VI: Friday, July 05, 14:00 to 15:30, U7-P2-De Lillo
Researching Entrepreneurship in Underrepresented Contexts
Howard Jean-Denis
Lakou: An exploration of entrepreneurial communities in Haiti
Alina Spanuth and David Urbano
To give or not to give: The two-sided effects of leveraging social networks in migrant entrepreneurial ecosystems
Mufsin Puthan Purayil
Malabar’s ‘Gulfprenuers’: Labour migration, consumption patterns, and local entrepreneurship among the Mappilas
Dipsikha Guha Majumdar
Beyond promises of entrepreneurship: Examining the role of intermediaries in governing entrepreneurship programs in Global South
Session VII: Saturday, July 06, 09:00 to 10:30, U7-P2-De Lillo
The Destructive Side of Entrepreneurship
Anders T. Bollmann
Venture capitalist warfare and military design thinking: Entrepreneurialism in western military institutions
Tabea Brüning, Tim Weiss and Michael Frese
Unintended consequences of field experiments in poverty settings
Fardeen Dodo, Mujtaba Ahsan and Sondos G. Abdelgawad
Navigating the fine line: Understanding destructiveness within mainstream entrepreneurial behavior
Séverine Le Loarne, Rola Al Ali and Gloria Haddad
“Under the shadow”: The dark side effect of entrepreneurial capitalism on gender and family dynamics. The case of Syrian women refugees entrepreneurship in Lebanon
Session VIII: Saturday, July 06, 11:00 to 12:30, U7-P2-De Lillo
Expanding Our Theory Repertoire & Closing
Pascal Dey and Simon Teasdale
‘Marching to someone else’s beat or creating your own groove?’ Toward a rhythmic understanding of everyday entrepreneurship
R. Daniel Wadhwani and Hannah Tucker
Toward a political theory of entrepreneurial capitalism