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Call for Papers -- ORM issue on Entrepreneurship

  • 1.  Call for Papers -- ORM issue on Entrepreneurship

    Posted 11-15-2007 12:52
    Hi-

    I'd like to make everyone aware of the call for papers below. ORM is
    offering folks interested in entrepreneurship a forum for advancing our
    methods. Please note that ORM's process is a bit unusual. Authors must
    submit a one-page summary of their paper by December 3, 2007 and then
    submit the full paper next summer.

    Regards,

    Dave Ketchen




    CALL FOR PAPERS
    Organizational Research Methods
    http://orm.sagepub.com

    SPECIAL ISSUE ON
    RESEARCH METHODS IN ENTREPRENEURSHIP: OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES

    Spurred by Joseph Schumpeter’s seminal work in the first half of the
    20th century, the entrepreneurship field is emerging today as a distinct
    area of inquiry. The field is devoted to building knowledge about how
    individuals and groups identify opportunities in the quest to develop
    innovative ideas and create new ventures. Although scholarly interest in
    entrepreneurship appears to be steadily rising across the management
    discipline, this growth has been accompanied by an increase in questions
    about the rigor of empirical studies. Research methods in
    entrepreneurship have been scrutinized along a variety of dimensions,
    such as construct measurement, research design, data analysis, and
    levels of analysis. This scrutiny presents researchers with new
    opportunities to better capture entrepreneurial phenomena in their
    investigations as well as new challenges about the design and execution
    of their studies.

    The purpose of this special issue is to publish work that will
    significantly enhance methodological practices in the field of
    entrepreneurship. In particular, we seek to (a) codify existing
    challenges about how methods are applied, (b) develop understanding
    about how to resolve current dilemmas, (c) lay a foundation for
    increased rigor in future studies, and (d) consider the implications of
    methodological rigor on the development of the field.

    Appropriate topics for the special include, but are not limited to:

    1. How methods developed in other fields (e.g., finance,
    psychology, sociology, geography, anthropology) can enhance
    entrepreneurship research;
    2. The integration between entrepreneurship theory and method;
    3. How well extant studies have used particular research designs,
    measurement approaches, and analytical techniques relative to ‘best
    practices;’
    4. How experimental designs can improve our understanding of
    entrepreneurship;
    5. Overcoming challenges associated with sampling in
    entrepreneurship studies, such as obtaining representative samples that
    are free of survivor bias;
    6. The construct validity of key metrics, such as growth,
    entrepreneurial orientation, and performance;
    7. The measurement of opportunities;
    8. The pitfalls of using cross-sectional and single-informant
    designs, and potential remedies;
    9. The treatment of levels of analysis within entrepreneurship
    inquiry;
    10. How qualitative approaches can further enhance the study of
    entrepreneurship; and
    11. Philosophy of science issues in the entrepreneurship context.

    We invite empirical, conceptual (i.e., new theory about method),
    methodological, and literature review papers. Two types of papers will
    be published: (a) Feature Articles and (b) Research Notes. Feature
    articles are full-length manuscripts typical of ORM contributions.
    Research notes are narrower in scope than a feature article. Research
    notes should make an important contribution regardless of length, but
    the contribution is more focused in scope, perhaps addressing a more
    specific issue/topic as opposed to broader issues. Research notes should
    be approximately 2500 words in length (excluding tables and references).
    For all submissions, a paper’s length relative to its contribution will
    be an important metric for assessment.

    All papers will undergo the standard double-blind ORM review process and
    must meet the standards of the ORM Editorial Policy Statement (see
    http://orm.sagepub.com). All articles published in this feature topic
    must make strong contributions to improving our understanding of
    research methods in entrepreneurship. Papers that address substantive as
    opposed to methodological issues are better suited for more
    substantively focused outlets.

    The Guest Editors for this special issue are Jeremy Short, Texas Tech
    University (jeremy.short@ttu.edu), Duane Ireland, Texas A&M University
    (DIreland@mays.tamu.edu), and Dave Ketchen, Auburn University
    (ketchda@auburn.edu).

    To be considered for publication, a one-page article proposal/summary
    must be sent by email to jeremy.short@ttu.edu by December 3, 2007. These
    summarized proposals will be used only to ensure that the focus and
    scope of each paper is appropriate for the special issue. The guest
    editors will review the summaries and then invite authors to submit
    complete papers. Authors with approved proposals must submit completed
    manuscripts between May 18 and July 18, 2008.

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    Ventures HO!