
Nurturing Modalities of Inquiry in Entrepreneurship Research
Description
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Advancing the way, we learn, think about and engage with various modalities of inquiry in Entrepreneurship research and practice, and its related subjects and areas of interest, the chapter authors draw inspiration from leading academics in the subject areas across the field. Their explorations centre around three critical points: the questioning of assumptions - who we are and what it is that we want to achieve; of what really makes sense - how we live and experience, our own and other voices and conversations; and of understanding our relationship with our social world and recognising its dynamic and emergent nature.
Contemporary Issues in Entrepreneurship Research is an official book series of the Institute for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (ISBE). Each volume is designed around a specific theme of importance to the entrepreneurship and small business community with articles collectively exploring and developing theory and practice in the field.
More details
Persons
Catherine Brentnall is a Senior Lecturer with Manchester Metropolitan University's Department of Strategy, Enterprise and Sustainability, UK.
Paul Jones is Professor of Entrepreneurship and Innovation at the School of Management, Swansea University, UK.
Pauric McGowan holds the Chair for Entrepreneurship and Business Development in the Ulster Business School, Ireland.
Content
Chapter 2. A sneak peek into the process of writing entrepreneurship research; Piritta Parkkari
Chapter 3. Data Congruence in What They Say, Do, and Feel: The Role of Researcher's Sensory Processing Sensitivity Trait; Yosra Boughattas and Erno T. Tornikoski
Chapter 4. Critical Realism as a Framework for Engaged Entrepreneurial Ecosystem Research; Steve Johnson
Chapter 5. The impactful potential of critical realist methodologies in entrepreneurship studies; Robert Wapshott and Oliver Mallett
Chapter 6. Visual Methods in Entrepreneurial Identity Research; reflections from an enterprise educator perspective; Sarah Preedy and Peter McLuskie
Chapter 7. Brickstorming: using materials to elicit meaning in research interviews; Helen Williams and Katrina Pritchard
Chapter 8. Making the meaningful moments visible - about the real-time study of entrepreneurial sensemaking; Gabi Kaffka and Norris Krueger
Chapter 9. Lost for words: Trying to investigate 'place' in entrepreneurship research; Catherine Olphin, Joanne Larty, and David Tyfield
Chapter 10. Decentration and intersubjectivity, collage as a qualitative method of data collection; Stephane Foliard, Sandrine Le Pontois, and Caroline Verzat
Chapter 11. Research involving women in the Global South - reflections on power dynamics; Marta Lindvert
Chapter 12. Warp and weft in grounded theory: a metaphor for a witness approach to entrepreneurship research; Heiko Marc Schmidt and Sandra Milena Santamaria-Alvarez
Chapter 13. Building an Immigrant Entrepreneurship Grounded Theory: the case of Mexican Entrepreneurs in Quebec; Hector Jose Martinez Arboleya
Chapter 14. Intersubjective Dialogue as a Form of Inquiry - Discussing the Purpose of Entrepreneurship Education Tools; Katarina Ellborg and Nicolai Nybye
Chapter 15. Critical Reflexivity as the Last Frontier to Uncover and Change the Ideologies Buried Behind Practices; Nicole Gross
Chapter 16. Epilogue: Nurturing Modes of Inquiry for a World Worth Living In...; Catherine Brentnall
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