Dear Colleague,
I hope this message finds you well.
I am now formally circulating a call for an edited Volume titled: 'Entrepreneurial, Innovative and Sustainable (EIS) Ecosystems: Best Practices and Implications for Quality of Life', to be published by Springer in the second semester of 2017.
The first deadline for abstract submission is June 15, 2016.
Please do not hesitate to spread the word and send it to interested colleagues, or to contact us in case of any query.
Many thanks.
Kindest regards,
João Carlos Correia Leitão
(on behalf of the editors)
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CfP_Springer Edited Volume
Entrepreneurial, Innovative and Sustainable (EIS) Ecosystems:
Best Practices and Implications for Quality of Life
Series - Applying Quality of Life Research: Best Practices
Introduction
The holistic construct of an (E)ntrepreneurial, (I)nnovative and (S)ustainable ecosystem refers to the collective and crossing nature of entrepreneurship, innovation and sustainability. New firms emerge and grow not only because there are entrepreneurs that created and develop them. New ventures emerge also because they are located in an ecosystem made of private and public stakeholders, which nurture and sustain them, supporting the inventive and innovative action of entrepreneurs.
Following Isenberg (2010), an entrepreneurial ecosystem consists of elements that can be grouped into six domains: (1) a conducive culture (e.g. tolerance of risk and mistakes, positive social status of entrepreneur); (2) facilitating policies and leadership (e.g. regulatory framework incentives, existence of public research institutes); (3) availability of dedicated finance (e.g. business angels, venture capital, micro loans, crowdfunding, crowdsourcing, equity funding); (4) relevant human capital (e.g. skilled and unskilled labour, serial entrepreneurs, entrepreneurship training, coaching and mentoring programmes); (5) venture-friendly markets for products (e.g. early adopters for prototypes, reference customers); and (6) a wide set of institutional and infrastructural supports (e.g. legal and accounting advisers, telecommunications and transportation infrastructure, entrepreneurship promoting associations).
Based on this definition, governments can evaluate whether they have an EIS ecosystem and what actions they should prosecute, knowing that each EIS ecosystem is unique and all elements of the ecosystem are interdependent. Successful dynamics often result from the identification of both comparative and competitive advantages funded on natural resources or specific assets, which may be in very limited numbers.
Objectives and knowledge transfer of the edited volume
Following the previous work of Leitão & Alves (2016), this edited volume aims, firstly, to present a multidimensional approach by providing a state of the art on EIS ecosystems, as well as structural and changing dynamics and its impact on citizens' quality of life. Secondly, it aims to present a set of international benchmarking case studies on good practices and initiatives oriented to the creation and development of EIS ecosystems. Thirdly, it aims to be positioned as a reference guide for scholars, policy makers and practitioners interested on entrepreneurship, public procurement, new public management, innovation and sustainability.
In terms of knowledge transfer, these international benchmarks on EIS ecosystems, should be able to be replicated, for fostering the creation of entrepreneurial and innovative units and promoting sustainable practices, under an open innovation paradigm, which needs to congregate both public and private stakeholders, using co-creation, transparency and participatory budget practices that jointly improve accountability and public management.
Recommended topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
Important Dates
May 30, 2016: Proposal of abstract
July 18, 2016: Notification of acceptance
January 16, 2017: Full chapter submission
February 28, 2017: Review results returned
May 31, 2017: Final chapter submission
June 16, 2017: Final acceptance notification
Inquiries can be forwarded to
João Leitão
University of Beira Interior (UBI)
School of Social and Human Sciences
Department of Management and Economics
6200 209 COVILHÃ, PORTUGAL
CEG-IST, Centre for Management Studies of Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon
C-MAST, Centre for Mechanical and Aerospace Science and Technologies, UBI
E-mail: jleitao@ubi.pt
Helena Alves
University of Beira Interior
School of Social and Human Sciences
Department of Management and Economics
6200 209 COVILHÃ, PORTUGAL
Business Sciences Studies Centre (NECE), UBI
E-mail: halves@ubi.pt
Norris Krueger
Center for Global Business Research, School of Advanced Studies, University of Phoenix, USA
E-mail: Norris.krueger@gmail.com
References:
Isenberg, D. (2010). How to Start an Entrepreneurial Revolution. Harvard Business Review 88(6): 41-50.
Leitão, J. & H. Alves (Eds.) (2016). Entrepreneurial and Innovative Practices in Public Institutions: A Quality of Life Approach, Applying Quality of Life Research: Best Practices, Springer.
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Best regards
João Carlos Correia Leitão
_____________________________________________________________
Universidade da Beira Interior (UBI)
Gabinete dos Alumni da UBI
CEG-IST, Centre for Management Studies of the Instituto Superior Técnico
Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal
C-MAST, Centre for Mechanical and Aerospace Science and Technologies,
Universidade da Beira Interior, Covilhã, Portugal
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). Ventures HO!