ABSTRACT

This book focuses on the nature and role of entrepreneurship in modern developed and emerging economies and societies, its relation to governments and universities, and its role in the often-forgotten informal economy. The aim is to position entrepreneurship in the post-crisis context and explore how its relation to universities and governments contributes to explain the countries’ and territories’ growth performance and resilience or vulnerability to the crisis. The accent is particularly on processes and patterns at local level and in small and medium-sized enterprises in local economic systems and districts, local systems of innovation, and the types and configurations of innovation these give origin to.

With globalization, entrepreneurship has become fundamental for the competitiveness of territories and countries, for policy management and for development. The local dimension is fundamental because of agglomeration economies and effects, the advantages of proximity and the nature of knowledge and information. Furthermore, territories carry to the centre-stage tacit knowledge, localized social capital, embeddedness and interpersonal relations as fundamental components of their endogenous socio-economic development and competitiveness. When local systems are connected in a horizontal network, they contribute to the strength of national and international systems. To play a constructive role from this perspective, entrepreneurship must avoid local entrenchment and support the local economy to upgrade and be competitive. To do this, the entrepreneurs’ interaction and alliance with universities and governments is a must for those countries and localities wanting to emerge. This requires that enterprises, universities and governments create synergies and spill-overs to their mutual advantage.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Entrepreneurs, universities and governments

part I|2 pages

Entrepreneurship and its frames

chapter 1|20 pages

Entrepreneurship, the entrepreneur and the territory

15An introduction

chapter 3|21 pages

Comparative analysis of innovation policy and market quality

Lessons from Russia and Japan 1

chapter 6|23 pages

Determinants of the internationalization of Chinese enterprises

Evidence from firm-level survey data

part II|2 pages

Entrepreneurship, universities and governments

chapter 8|23 pages

Innovation modes and knowledge relations

165The learning match between university and enterprises from a regional perspective 1

chapter 9|22 pages

Creative workers in Europe

Is it a reserve of the ‘Would-Be Entrepreneurs’? A cross country comparison

chapter 11|16 pages

The effect of government intervention on entrepreneurship

Empirical evidence from China

part III|2 pages

The territory as context

chapter 12|34 pages

The role of a local university in regional development

249The case of Regensburg

chapter 13|25 pages

Academic spin-offs and the innovative city

Universities’ role in the entrepreneurial ecosystem of Boston

chapter 14|17 pages

Native and immigrant entrepreneurship

Costs of doing business and local liabilities

chapter |13 pages

Conclusion

The triple helix, social impacts and beyond