Autores
James Austin, Ezequiel Reficco
Fecha de publicación
2008
Revista
Int'l J. Not-for-Profit L.
Volumen
11
Páginas
86
Descripción
CSE emerges from and builds on three other conceptual frameworks: entrepreneurship, corporate entrepreneurship, and social entrepreneurship. CSE's conceptual roots begin with Schumpeter's vision that nations' innovation and technological change emanate from individual entrepreneurs with their unternehmergeist or fiery spirit generating" creative destruction" of old ways with new ones (1912, 1934, 1942). Stevenson (1983; 1985) provided a different definition of Entrepreneurship:" the pursuit of opportunity through innovative leverage of resources that for the most part are not controlled internally." Schumpeter had projected that the engines of entrepreneurship would shift from individuals to corporations with their greater resources for R&D, which did happen. However, over time corporate bureaucracy was seen as stifling innovation.
To remedy this, a focus on Corporate Entrepreneurship within companies …
Artículos de Google Académico
J Austin, E Reficco - Int'l J. Not-for-Profit L., 2008