ABSTRACT

Israeli national neoliberalism has promoted innovation policies leading to an ostensible paradox: At the center is a startup nation with a vibrant and successful high-tech entrepreneurial ecosystem, accumulating resources and enabling constant growth. At the geographical and social periphery, there has emerged a parallel society with often-marginalized groups not able to keep up. In one of the most unequal countries with a high rate of poverty, entrepreneurial heroes are celebrated at the center, promoting a myth that all could be self-made successes. At the periphery, entrepreneurs are struggling to survive, often pushed into precarious working and living conditions.

Applying critical theory discourse, this book illustrates how neoliberalism and entrepreneurship are intertwined and how the startup nation has evolved in Israel. It explores how national neoliberal state policies have targeted technological innovation as a tool to obtain a competitive advantage in the international arena rather than aiming at increasing economic achievements and well-being for all. It will demonstrate that the Israeli entrepreneurship scene exemplifies the existence of parallel entrepreneurial societal spaces, analyze the positionality of entrepreneurs belonging to a variety of groups that characterize Israeli society, and uncover structural disadvantages and related levels of precarity as well as existing links between entrepreneurial advantages and disadvantages, mobility and varying degrees of social marginality.

Dark Sides of the Startup Nation sheds light onto the problematic and sometimes contradictory myth that entrepreneurship is meritocratic and that neoliberal capitalism provides everyone with equal opportunities to succeed. The book will be of interest to researchers, academics, policy makers and students in the fields of entrepreneurship and small business management, responsibility and business ethics, and technology and innovation.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|14 pages

Neoliberalism and Entrepreneurship

chapter 3|14 pages

Center and Periphery in Israel

Startup Nation and Parallel Economy

chapter 5|10 pages

Introducing the Theoretical Framework

Contexts, Fields, Norm Circles and Positionality

chapter 6|17 pages

What You Look Like Is Important

Technological Entrepreneurs of the Ethiopian Community

chapter 7|23 pages

Former Elites Moving Away from the Center?

chapter 8|19 pages

Where You Come from Is Important

Migrant Entrepreneurship Between the Center and the Periphery

chapter 9|17 pages

Women Still Lagging Behind

chapter 12|18 pages

Comparative Analysis of Groups

chapter 13|14 pages

What Can We Learn from the Experts?

chapter 14|9 pages

Conclusion