While entrepreneurship may be driven by personal interests and lifestyle choices, entrepreneurial actions are not only economically driven opportunity-searching processes but also enactments of social transformation that may or may not lead to socioeconomic benefits. We advance that exploring these entrepreneurial processes can inform a theory of the firm that may explain how socioeconomic processes shape the socioeconomic environment of communities while serving individuals. This article discusses several understandings of the firm, as theorized in extant literature. Guided by these different conceptualizations, we present a case study of an artist and artisan cluster in Western Massachusetts to demonstrate various understandings of entrepreneurial processes. By way of conclusion, we develop the idea of the firm as a geographically embedded relational understanding aiding entrepreneurs to achieve personal goals while coconstructing their local environment.
Research Article|
March 01 2015
An entrepreneurial context for the theory of the firm: Exploring assumptions and consequences Open Access
Arturo E. Osorio;
Arturo E. Osorio
Rutgers University - Newark
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Paul F. Donnelly
Paul F. Donnelly
Dublin Institute of Technology
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing on behalf of Sacred Heart University
Online ISSN: 2574-8904
Print ISSN: 1550-333X
Published by DigitalCommons©SHU, 2015
2015
licensed reuse rights only
New England Journal of Entrepreneurship (2015) 18 (1): 71–85.
Citation
Osorio AE, Ozkazanc-Pan B, Donnelly PF (2015), "An entrepreneurial context for the theory of the firm: Exploring assumptions and consequences". New England Journal of Entrepreneurship, Vol. 18 No. 1 pp. 71–85, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/NEJE-18-01-2015-B005
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