This handbook is focused on the analytical dimension in researching international entrepreneurship. It offers a diverse collection of chapters focused on qualitative and quantitative methods that are being practised and can be used by future researchers in the field of international entrepreneurship. The qualitative cluster covers articles, conceptual and empirical chapters as well as literature reviews, whereas the quantitative cluster analyses international entrepreneurship through a broad range of statistical methods such as regressions, panel data, structural equation modelling as well as decision-making and optimisation models in certain and uncertain circumstances. This book is essential reading for researchers, scholars and practitioners who want to learn and implement new methods in analysing entrepreneurial opportunities across national borders.
Tabla de materias
Introduction: International Entrepreneurship from Methodological Perspectives.- Part I: Qualitative Research Streams: Conceptualisation.- Immigrants and International Entrepreneurship: Transnational Dynamic Capability and Dual Social Network Embeddedness.- Internationalisation of SMEs and Distant Markets: The Networking and Service Functions of Global Cities.- International Entrepreneurship Within Service Ecosystems: Applying Service-Dominant Logic and the BAR Framework in Research Design.- Entrepreneurs, Platforms, and International Technology Transformation.- Part II: Qualitative Research Streams: Literature Reviews.- A Review of International Entrepreneurship as Part of Broader Opportunity Research: Topic Modelling Approach.- Entrepreneurial Decision-Making Process Optimisation: A Literature Review and Future Research Agenda.- International Entrepreneurship and Technology: A Structured Literature Review.- Part III: Qualitative Research Streams: Empirical Methods.- The Impact of Diaspora on International Entrepreneurship in Malaysia: A Historical Institutionalism Approach.- Internationalisation of Start-Ups: An Institutional Entrepreneurship Perspective.- Always Trusts, Always Hopes, Always Perseveres? Comparative Discourse Analysis of the Perception of International Entrepreneurship During Pandemic.- Barriers to Entrepreneurial Internationalisation for Ukrainian Creative and Cultural Industries (CCI).- Part IV: Quantitative Research Streams: Applied Statistics.- Early Internationalising Ventures Facing Ageing and Sizing: International Growth, Entrepreneurial, and Market Orientation.- To Internationalise Entrepreneurially from Low-Tech Emerging Market: The Role of International Entrepreneurial Capability and Orientation in Early Internationalising Firms from Bangladesh.- The Study of Leaders Navigating Institutional on Female International Entrepreneurship in Emerging Economies.- The Impact of International Networking Capability on International Performance: The Mediating Role of Dynamic Entrepreneurship Capabilities.- How Do Experts Think? An Investigation of the Barriers to Internationalisation of SMEs in Iran.- Part V: Quantitative Research Streams: MCDM.- A Hybrid Best-Worst Method and Multi-criteria Decision-Making Methods for Location Selection in the International Entrepreneurial Ecosystem. Case Study: Medical Tourism Start-Up.- A Hybrid Interval-Valued Intuitionistic Fuzzy Aggregation Operator-Based Algorithm for Team Member Selection of International Entrepreneurs.- Part VI: Quantitative Research Streams: Optimisation.- International Entrepreneurship Rate Prediction Using Neural Networks.- Introducing New Products to International Markets Using Green Entrepreneurial Supply Chain Optimisation.- Applying System Dynamics Approach to Modelling Growth Engines in the International Entrepreneurship Era.
Sobre el autor
Vahid Jafari-Sadeghi is a Lecturer in Strategy in the School of Strategy and Leadership at Coventry University. Vahid has published papers in several international journals such as Journal of Business Research, International Business Review, Journal of International Entrepreneurship, Research in International Business and Finance, etc. He is member of the editorial advisory board of British Food Journal and has acted as guest editor and reviewer for several academic journals and performed as track chair and presenter for a number of international conferences.
Hannan Amoozad Mahdiraji is a Senior Lecturer in Business and management at Leicester Castle Business School, De Montfort University, Leicester, United Kingdom. His research focus is on multiple-criteria decision-making methods, game theory, and supply chain management. Since 2011, he has published several research papers in prominent international journals.
Léo-Paul Dana, a graduate of Mc Gill University and of HEC Montreal, is a professor at Montpellier Business School and a member of the Entrepreneurship & Innovation chair, which is part of Lab Ex Entrepreneurship (University of Montpellier, France). This ‘laboratory of excellence’ is funded by the French government in recognition of high-level research initiatives in the human and natural sciences (Lab Ex Entreprendre, ANR-10-Lab Ex-11-01). He has published extensively in a variety of leading journals including the British Food Journal, Cornell Quarterly, Entrepreneurship & Regional Development, Entrepreneurship: Theory & Practice, International Small Business Journal, Journal of Small Business Management, Journal of World Business, and Small Business Economics.