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Entrepreneurial space and the freedom for entrepreneurship: Institutional settings, policy, and action in the space industry

Research Summary Anticipating that innovation nurtures entrepreneurship, we began an extended case study of an innovative start‐up in the space industry. We quickly saw that institutions imposed formidable barriers to implementing entrepreneurship from innovation. Curious about how, why and the exte...

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Published in:Strategic entrepreneurship journal 2021-06, Vol.15 (2), p.309-340
Main Authors: Lamine, Wadid, Anderson, Alistair, Jack, Sarah L., Fayolle, Alain
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c4032-f5918a56f307529b0efa79b5518a34771818a25be4324661f9541628340c67763
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 309
container_title Strategic entrepreneurship journal
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creator Lamine, Wadid
Anderson, Alistair
Jack, Sarah L.
Fayolle, Alain
description Research Summary Anticipating that innovation nurtures entrepreneurship, we began an extended case study of an innovative start‐up in the space industry. We quickly saw that institutions imposed formidable barriers to implementing entrepreneurship from innovation. Curious about how, why and the extent of this situation, we widened our study to other start‐ups, CEOs of existing businesses, an incubator, a technology transfer office and key influencers in large space companies and agencies. We found that institutions and policies had, in effect, shrunk the entrepreneurial field, leaving little room for enterprise. Conceptualizing from this, we propose the institutions create an “entrepreneurial space.” Theoretically, we explain how this concept of an entrepreneurial space can be usefully applied in other contexts. Managerial Summary The space industry is extremely innovative. It is also dominated by two powerful incumbent firms and a third that is highly regulated. This research examines how entrepreneurship in the space industry is shaped by institutions, and what this implies for the freedom to be entrepreneurial. We investigate this question in the French European context. We find that while the industrial context and institutions had completely pushed entrepreneurship out of the upstream segments it flourished in the margins of this industry. The upstream segment is not at all entrepreneurial; downstream is the entrepreneurial milieu of the space industry. We recommend that policymakers (a) strengthen private‐public‐partnership arrangements; (b) implement policies to attract venture capitalists to transform and reinvigorate the upstream segment; and (c) design specific incubation mechanisms for space start‐ups.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/sej.1392
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subjects Business administration
entrepreneurial space
Entrepreneurs
Entrepreneurship
Humanities and Social Sciences
Innovations
innovative entrepreneurship
institutional theory
policy and institutions
space industry
title Entrepreneurial space and the freedom for entrepreneurship: Institutional settings, policy, and action in the space industry
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