The deadline for submitting extended abstracts for the virtual paper development workshop, which is in conjunction with the Small Business Economics special issue on the Political Economy of Entrepreneurship, is October 31st.
The special issue is open to contributions that address important and understudied issues related to the political economy of entrepreneurship. We welcome rigorous theoretical and empirical research from a broad spectrum of academic disciplines. We especially encourage insights from a public choice and/or new institutional economics perspective, although studies adopting other political economy perspectives that improve our understanding of the relationship between politics and entrepreneurship will also be considered.
The attached call for papers provides a detailed introduction to the topic, identifies several important gaps in the literature, and raises numerous potential research questions that could be addressed in the special issue. More information is also available on the SBEJ website at: Small Business Economics.
Please email abstract submissions to Daniel.Bennett.2@Louisville.edu with "Virtual PDW Application" as the subject line.
| Springer |
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| Small Business Economics |
| While there exists empirical evidence suggestive that certain entrepreneurship and innovation policies have been successful, depending crucially on policy design (Becker, 2015; Lerner, 2010), much of the evidence only considers short-term effects and/or is based on research designs that do not support causal inferences (Dvouletý et al., 2021). |
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Daniel Bennett
Associate Professor
University of Louisville
Daniel.Bennett.2@Louisville.edu------------------------------