Description |
1 online resource (193 pages) |
Contents |
Cover; Half-Title Page; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Introduction: Who are the New Entrepreneurs, and How are they Creating Business Today?; First part: Who are the new entrepreneurs of the 21st Century?; Second part: How are new entrepreneurs creating business today?; 1. Entrepreneurship and High Heels; 1.1. Entrepreneurship by women; 1.1.1. Definition; 1.1.2. The GEM Special Report: Women's Entrepreneurship; 1.1.3. Portraits of three famous female entrepreneurs; 1.2. Research on female entrepreneurship; 1.2.1. Evolution of the research on female entrepreneurship |
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1.2.2. Entrepreneurial motivations of women1.3. Female entrepreneurship: a variety of profiles; 1.3.1. When necessity means female entrepreneurship; 1.3.2. Entrepreneurship as a transition career for high-qualified women; 1.3.3. Mompreneurs or the art of conciliating all the roles of women in society; 1.4. Summary; 2. Entrepreneurship for All Ages; 2.1. Young entrepreneurs: values and motivation of generation Y; 2.1.1. Who are millennials?; 2.1.2. Generation Y: young entrepreneurs who want more than money?; 2.1.3. Entrepreneurship by the young: developing the sense of initiative |
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2.2. Mid-career managers: from employment to entrepreneurship2.2.1. The phenomenon of the gray ceiling; 2.2.2. Mid-career: new entrepreneurs by choice; 2.2.3. Mid-career nascent entrepreneurs taking over a business; 2.3. Seniorpreneurs: starting a business in retirement; 2.3.1. Definition; 2.3.2. The main factors explaining the rise of elderly entrepreneurship; 2.3.3. Entrepreneurship of the elderly: another way of thinking and managing economic creation; 2.4. Summary; 3. Entrepreneurship Without Limits; 3.1. Social entrepreneurship: what is it really about?; 3.1.1. Definition |
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3.1.2. Challenges of social entrepreneurship3.1.3. Back to the basics; 3.2. Social entrepreneurs doing business beyond profit; 3.2.1. Boundaries of social entrepreneurship; 3.2.2. Social entrepreneurs and their motivations; 3.2.3. Sources of social entrepreneurship; 3.3. Handipreneurs: integrating disabled people through business creation; 3.3.1. The integration of disabled people in the job market; 3.3.2. A handipreneur is a person with a disability who decides to create a business; 3.3.3. Disability, a factor of entrepreneurial motivation?; 3.4. Summary; 4. The Entrepreneurial Connection |
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4.1. The importance of the social network4.1.1. Strong and weak ties; 4.1.2. Networking and entrepreneurship; 4.2. The development of social capital for the creation of a business; 4.2.1. Social capital and trust; 4.2.2. Social capital and entrepreneurship; 4.3. Summary; 5. Improving the Expansion of Business Creation; 5.1. The role of incubation in the creation and growth of start-ups; 5.1.1. The different types of incubators; 5.1.2 Selection of projects and support; 5.2. The teaching of entrepreneurship within higher education institutions; 5.2.1. Can entrepreneurship be taught? |
Notes |
5.2.2. Entrepreneurial learning: a focus on France |
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Print version record |
Subject |
Entrepreneurship -- Handbooks, manuals, etc
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Entrepreneurship
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Genre/Form |
Handbooks and manuals
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Gabarret, Inés
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ISBN |
9781119419730 |
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1119419735 |
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