How Entrepreneurship Evolves: The Founders of New Magazines in America, 1741-1860

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Haveman, Heather A.; Habinek, Jacob; Goodman, Leo A.
署名单位:
University of California System; University of California Berkeley; University of California System; University of California Berkeley
刊物名称:
ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY
ISSN/ISSBN:
0001-8392
DOI:
10.1177/0001839212467168
发表日期:
2012
页码:
585-624
关键词:
CULTURAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP social-structure UNITED-STATES scientists
摘要:
We craft a historically sensitive model of entrepreneurship linking individual actors to the evolving social structures they must navigate to acquire resources and launch new ventures. Theories of entrepreneurship and industry evolution suggest two opposing hypotheses: as an industry develops, launching a new venture may become more difficult for all but industry insiders and the socially prominent because of competition from large incumbents, or it may become easier for all people because the legitimacy accorded to the industry simplifies the entrepreneurial task. To test these two conflicting claims, we study the American magazine industry from 1741 to 1860. We find that magazine publishing was originally restricted to publishing-industry insiders, professionals, and the highly educated, but most later founders came from outside publishing and more were of middling stature. Gains by entrepreneurs from the social periphery, however, were uneven: most were doctors and clergy without college degrees in small urban areas; magazines founded by industry insiders remained predominant in the industry centers. Our analysis demonstrates the importance of grounding studies of entrepreneurship in historical context. It also shows that entrepreneurship scholars must attend to temporal shifts within the focal industry and in society at large.
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