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36 Immigrant Entrepreneurs and Inventors

  • Ben A. Rissing und Steve Gold
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Abstract

The chapter overviews the role of immigrants in firm creation, commercialization, and knowledge generation activities. It begins by reviewing the intellectual origins of this research domain, emphasizing immigration theories relating to individual and collective agency. Stressing the dynamism of immigrant contributions, it overviews research relating to ‘high skill’ immigration outcomes (e.g., startup formation, creative work, patenting) and ethnic entrepreneurship (e.g., self-employment predominantly facilitating economic exchange among immigrant communities). Next, it details key theoretical mechanisms advanced to explain the higher rates of immigrant entrepreneurship and innovation activities relative to natives, including the role of positive selection, immigration policy, social capital, and knowledge transfer, among other processes. The forces that may constrain immigrants, such as ethnic enclave conflict, government bureaucracy, employers, and human capital portability, are also described. The chapter closes with areas for future research and highlights the challenges ahead.

Abstract

The chapter overviews the role of immigrants in firm creation, commercialization, and knowledge generation activities. It begins by reviewing the intellectual origins of this research domain, emphasizing immigration theories relating to individual and collective agency. Stressing the dynamism of immigrant contributions, it overviews research relating to ‘high skill’ immigration outcomes (e.g., startup formation, creative work, patenting) and ethnic entrepreneurship (e.g., self-employment predominantly facilitating economic exchange among immigrant communities). Next, it details key theoretical mechanisms advanced to explain the higher rates of immigrant entrepreneurship and innovation activities relative to natives, including the role of positive selection, immigration policy, social capital, and knowledge transfer, among other processes. The forces that may constrain immigrants, such as ethnic enclave conflict, government bureaucracy, employers, and human capital portability, are also described. The chapter closes with areas for future research and highlights the challenges ahead.

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. List of Figures IX
  4. List of Tables X
  5. 1 Introduction 1
  6. Theoretical Lenses
  7. 2 Ecological Approaches to Entrepreneurship 21
  8. 3 Ecological Approaches to Innovation 41
  9. 4 Evolutionary Perspectives on Entrepreneurship 61
  10. 5 Evolutionary Perspectives on Innovation 81
  11. 6 Institutional Theories of Entrepreneurship 95
  12. 7 Institutional Theories of Innovation 111
  13. 8 Market Categories and Entrepreneurship Research 131
  14. 9 Categories and Cognition in Innovation 145
  15. 10 The Social Structure of Entrepreneurship 159
  16. 11 The Social Structure of Innovation 175
  17. Data and Methods
  18. 12 The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor and Cross-National Research 195
  19. 13 European Riches: Registry Data 215
  20. 14 Using Patent Data in Innovation and Entrepreneurship Research: A Comprehensive Assessment and Recommendations 235
  21. 15 Film, Music, Books, Etc.: Artifacts of Cultural Innovation and Entrepreneurship 253
  22. 16 Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Asia: The Role of the State and Business Groups 269
  23. 17 Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Africa 289
  24. 18 Approaches to Causal Identification in Studies of Entrepreneurship and Innovation 313
  25. 19 Big Data and the Computational Social Science of Entrepreneurship and Innovation 329
  26. 20 Field Experiments in Entrepreneurship and Innovation 353
  27. The Origins of Ideas and Entrepreneurs
  28. 21 The Careers Perspective and Startups as Employers 381
  29. 22 Teams in Entrepreneurship and Innovation 391
  30. 23 Academic Entrepreneurs and Inventors 405
  31. 24 Communities of Entrepreneurship and Innovation 425
  32. 25 The Legal Environment for Innovation and Entrepreneurship 437
  33. 26 The Cultural Environment for Innovation and Entrepreneurship 467
  34. 27 Grand Challenges and Social Entrepreneurship 481
  35. The Mobilization of People and Resources
  36. 28 Narratives of Cultural Entrepreneurship 493
  37. 29 Social Relationships, Resource Mobilization, and Organizational Scaling 505
  38. 30 Status Effects in Entrepreneurship and Innovation 529
  39. 31 Early-Stage Investors 547
  40. 32 The Creation of Routines and Roles in Startups 565
  41. 33 Social Movements, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation 581
  42. Inequalities in Entrepreneurship and Innovation
  43. 34 Gender Gap in Entrepreneurship and Innovation 603
  44. 35 Innovation and Entrepreneurship: A Double-Edged Sword for Racially Minoritized Communities 623
  45. 36 Immigrant Entrepreneurs and Inventors 639
  46. 37 Entrepreneurship, Innovation, and Income Inequality 663
  47. List of Contributors 677
  48. Index 687
Heruntergeladen am 5.12.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111085722-036/html
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