Organizations as Fonts of Entrepreneurship
Published Online:23 Feb 2011https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.1100.0622
References
- Knowledge transfer through inheritance: Spin-out generation, development and survival. Acad. Management J. (2004) 47(4):501–522Crossref, Google Scholar
- Creativity in Context (1996) (Westview Press, Boulder, CO) Google Scholar
- Start-ups, spin-offs and internal projects. J. Law, Econom. Organ. (1995) 11(2):362–378Google Scholar
- Bringing the firm back in: Stratification, segmentation, and the organization of work. Amer. Sociol. Rev. (1980) 45(5):737–765Crossref, Google Scholar
- Entrepreneurship as a non-profit-seeking activity. Internat. Entrepreneurship Management J. (2009) 5(1):23–44Crossref, Google Scholar
- The Origin and Evolution of New Businesses (2000) (Oxford University Press, New York) Crossref, Google Scholar
- Structural holes and good ideas. Amer. J. Sociol. (2004) 110(2):349–399Crossref, Google Scholar
- , Lounsbury M. Coming from good stock: Career histories and new venture formation. Research in the Sociology of Organizations (2002) 19(Emerald Publishing, Bingley, UK) 229–262Google Scholar
- The fates of De Novo and De Alio producers in the American automobile industry 1885–1981. Strategic Management J. (1996) 17(S1):117–137Crossref, Google Scholar
- A Behavioral Theory of the Firm (1992) (Blackwell, London) . [Orig. pub. 1963, Prentice-Hall, Upper Saddle River, NJ.]Google Scholar
- Pre-entry knowledge, learning, and the survival of new firms. Organ. Sci. (2009) 20(3):516–537Link, Google Scholar
- The small firm effect and the entrepreneurial spawning of scientists and engineers. Management Sci. (2010) 56(4):659–681Link, Google Scholar
- Hybrid entrepreneurship. Management Sci. (2010) 56(2):253–269Link, Google Scholar
- Spin-outs: Knowledge diffusion through employee mobility. RAND J. Econom. (2006) 37(4):841–860Crossref, Google Scholar
- , Libecap G. Entrepreneurs as organizational products: Semiconductor firms and venture capital firms. Advances in the Study of Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and Economic Growth (1986) 1(JAI Press, Greenwich, CT) 33–58Google Scholar
- Entrepreneurial spawning: Public corporations and the genesis of new ventures, 1986 to 1999. J. Finance (2005) 60(2):577–614Crossref, Google Scholar
- Entrepreneurship in equilibrium. (2002) . NBER Working Paper w9001, http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=315998Google Scholar
- Where job values come from: Family and schooling background, cognitive ability, and gender. Amer. Sociol. Rev. (2003) 68(2):251–278Crossref, Google Scholar
- Does entrepreneurship pay? An empirical analysis of the returns to self-employment. J. Political Econom. (2000) 108(3):604–631Crossref, Google Scholar
- Structural inertia and organizational change. Amer. Sociol. Rev. (1984) 49(2):149–164Crossref, Google Scholar
- The birth of capabilities: Market entry and the importance of pre-history. Indust. Corporate Change (2002) 11(4):725–760Crossref, Google Scholar
- When do employees become entrepreneurs? Management Sci. (2007) 53(6):919–933Link, Google Scholar
- Underinvestment and incompetence as responses to radical innovation: Evidence from the photolithographic alignment equipment industry. RAND J. Econom. (1993) 24(2):248–270Crossref, Google Scholar
- Dealers of Lightning: Xerox PARC and the Dawn of the Computer Age (1999) (Harper Business, New York) Google Scholar
- Job matching and the theory of turnover. J. Political Econom. (1979) 87(5):972–990Crossref, Google Scholar
- Employee startups in high-tech industries. Indust. Corporate Change (2001) 10(3):639–674Crossref, Google Scholar
- Entry by spinoffs. Management Sci. (2005) 51(8):1291–1306Link, Google Scholar
- Entrepreneurship. J. Labor Econom. (2005) 23(4):649–680Crossref, Google Scholar
- Exploration and exploitation in organizational learning. Organ. Sci. (1991) 2(1):71–87Link, Google Scholar
- The Achieving Society (1961) (Van Nostrand, New York) Crossref, Google Scholar
- Employee-Organization Linkages: The Psychology of Commitment, Absenteeism, and Turnover (1982) (Academic Press, New York) Google Scholar
- Workplace peers and entrepreneurship. Management Sci. (2010) 56(7):1116–1126Link, Google Scholar
- An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change (1982) (Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA) Google Scholar
- A genealogical approach to organizational life chances: The parent-progeny transfer and Silicon Valley law firms, 1946–1996. Admin. Sci. Quart. (2002) 47(3):474–506Crossref, Google Scholar
- Organizational genealogies and the persistence of gender inequality: The case of Silicon Valley law firms. Admin. Sci. Quart. (2005) 50(3):440–472Crossref, Google Scholar
- , Schoonhoven C. B., Romanelli E. The local origins of new firms. The Entrepreneurship Dynamic: Origins of Entrepreneurship and the Evolution of New Industries (2001) (Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA) 40–67Google Scholar
- Regional Advantage: Culture and Competition in Silicon Valley and Route 128 (1994) (Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA) Google Scholar
- Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy (1950) (Harper Torchbooks, New York) Google Scholar
- The Illusions of Entrepreneurship: The Costly Myths That Entrepreneurs, Investors, and Policy Makers Live By (2007) (Yale University Press, New Haven, CT) Google Scholar
- Executive migration and interorganizational competition. Soc. Sci. Res. (1999) 28(3):289–315Crossref, Google Scholar
- The strength of corporate culture and the reliability of firm performance. Admin. Sci. Quart. (2002) 47(1):70–91Crossref, Google Scholar
- Bureaucracy and entrepreneurship: Workplace effects on entrepreneurial entry. Admin. Sci. Quart. (2007) 52(3):387–412Crossref, Google Scholar
- Competence and commitment: Employer size and entrepreneurial endurance. Indust. Corporate Change (2011) . ePub ahead of print June 7, http://icc.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2011/06/07/icc.dtr025.abstractGoogle Scholar
- Entrepreneurship as a mobility process. (2010) . Working paper, Stanford University, Stanford, CAGoogle Scholar
- When do scientists become entrepreneurs? The social structural antecedents of commercial activity in the academic life sciences. Amer. J. Sociol. (2006) 112(1):97–144Crossref, Google Scholar
- , Alverez S., Agarwal R., Sorenson O. Social networks and entrepreneurship. Handbook of Entrepreneurship Research: Disciplinary Perspectives (2005) (Kluwer Academic Publishers, Boston) 233–252Crossref, Google Scholar

