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The Social Capital of Entrepreneurial Newcomers: Bridging, Status-power and Cognition
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Barnes and Noble
The Social Capital of Entrepreneurial Newcomers: Bridging, Status-power and Cognition
Current price: $59.99
Barnes and Noble
The Social Capital of Entrepreneurial Newcomers: Bridging, Status-power and Cognition
Current price: $59.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
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Robin Holt, Professor of Entrepreneurship, Politics and Society, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
Robert Lee drives forward the agenda of socially-situated cognition research, moving beyond a static model of entrepreneurial cognition and offering instead a dynamic, socially embedded, communication-based perspective. He breaks from the traditional focus on either the individual entrepreneurial agent
the social and institutional context of entrepreneurship and makes a serious and skilful effort to provide an integrative understanding of the entrepreneur as placed in a complex, relational and ambiguous context. Recognising that entrepreneurship is both cognitive and relational, he plays with the idea of power within legitimacy creation and through this illustrates the ultimately distributed nature of entrepreneurial processes. This book adds to the growing domain of socially-situated entrepreneurial cognition research and will appeal to those interested in understanding the connection between cognition, communication and legitimacy in the context of entrepreneurship.
Jean Clarke, Professor of Entrepreneurship and Organization, Leeds University Business School, University of Leeds, UK
‘In a very welcome contribution to the literature, Robert Lee explores the social capital mobilised by entrepreneurs and develops a communicative action approach that yields important insights into how would-be entrepreneurs achieve legitimacy through navigating the complex web of power and status relations in which they are enmeshed. This book will appeal not only to those interested in entrepreneurship, but also be a valuable reference source for those interested in the workings of social capital’.
Michael Bresnen, Professor of Organisation Studies, Alliance Manchester Business School, University of Manchester, UK
This book presents a novel and intellectually stimulating account of the understudied links between entrepreneurial newcomers’ bridging ties and their networked cognition. With a paucity of research addressing cognitively specific features of networked language and conduct,
explores how entrepreneurial newcomers attune their cognition when interacting with high status and powerful vertical bridges. Largely reflecting communication accommodation perspectives, the author theoretically and empirically examines entrepreneurial newcomers’ cognitive ‘convergence’ and ‘divergence’ when bridging.