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Entrepreneurs in residence at the nexus of regional economy and university entrepreneurial ecosystems

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Entrepreneurs in residence at the nexus of regional economy and university entrepreneurial ecosystems. / Cho, Daniel S.; Owalla, Beldina; Ge, Bingbing.
In: Regional Studies, Regional Science, Vol. 11, No. 1, 31.12.2024, p. 441-452.

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Cho DS, Owalla B, Ge B. Entrepreneurs in residence at the nexus of regional economy and university entrepreneurial ecosystems. Regional Studies, Regional Science. 2024 Dec 31;11(1):441-452. Epub 2024 Jul 25. doi: 10.1080/21681376.2024.2374995

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Cho, Daniel S. ; Owalla, Beldina ; Ge, Bingbing. / Entrepreneurs in residence at the nexus of regional economy and university entrepreneurial ecosystems. In: Regional Studies, Regional Science. 2024 ; Vol. 11, No. 1. pp. 441-452.

Bibtex

@article{fbd81cf4246445be94a610df00abd034,
title = "Entrepreneurs in residence at the nexus of regional economy and university entrepreneurial ecosystems",
abstract = "Entrepreneurial ecosystem (EE) is a novel perspective to analyse the interplay between support systems and businesses in regions. Simultaneously, universities have been playing increasingly important roles in entrepreneurship, fostering economic growth both through the wider regional economy (RE) and their own university EEs (UEEs). Entrepreneurs in residence (EiRs), chosen by universities as exemplar entrepreneurs, therefore provide potentially important conduits between the regional economy, UEEs and entrepreneurs, leading us to explore how and why do EiRs and universities interact in relation to entrepreneurial ecosystems to enhance the regional economy? Our qualitative study of a UK university case, conducted in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic which severely impacted many businesses{\textquoteright} access to resources, gives a particular temporal context to this research. It identifies accessing resources, building legitimacy and undertaking bridging activities as the three highest-level dimensions characterising EiR–university interactions, which have relevance for both the UEE and regional economy more widely, offering a framework for future EiR programmes. This study contributes to the regional entrepreneurship and EE literature, by examining the role of regional universities as anchor tenants and catalysts of entrepreneurial growth and resilience within regions, and calls for further research into the evolution of EiR–university interactions in different institutional contexts.",
keywords = "regional entrepreneurship, M11, M16, M13, university entrepreneurship, COVID-19; resilience; evolution, I23, L21, O11, L25, entrepreneurial ecosystems, F23, Entrepreneurs in residence, L53",
author = "Cho, {Daniel S.} and Beldina Owalla and Bingbing Ge",
year = "2024",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1080/21681376.2024.2374995",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "441--452",
journal = "Regional Studies, Regional Science",
issn = "2168-1376",
publisher = "Taylor and Francis Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Entrepreneurs in residence at the nexus of regional economy and university entrepreneurial ecosystems

AU - Cho, Daniel S.

AU - Owalla, Beldina

AU - Ge, Bingbing

PY - 2024/12/31

Y1 - 2024/12/31

N2 - Entrepreneurial ecosystem (EE) is a novel perspective to analyse the interplay between support systems and businesses in regions. Simultaneously, universities have been playing increasingly important roles in entrepreneurship, fostering economic growth both through the wider regional economy (RE) and their own university EEs (UEEs). Entrepreneurs in residence (EiRs), chosen by universities as exemplar entrepreneurs, therefore provide potentially important conduits between the regional economy, UEEs and entrepreneurs, leading us to explore how and why do EiRs and universities interact in relation to entrepreneurial ecosystems to enhance the regional economy? Our qualitative study of a UK university case, conducted in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic which severely impacted many businesses’ access to resources, gives a particular temporal context to this research. It identifies accessing resources, building legitimacy and undertaking bridging activities as the three highest-level dimensions characterising EiR–university interactions, which have relevance for both the UEE and regional economy more widely, offering a framework for future EiR programmes. This study contributes to the regional entrepreneurship and EE literature, by examining the role of regional universities as anchor tenants and catalysts of entrepreneurial growth and resilience within regions, and calls for further research into the evolution of EiR–university interactions in different institutional contexts.

AB - Entrepreneurial ecosystem (EE) is a novel perspective to analyse the interplay between support systems and businesses in regions. Simultaneously, universities have been playing increasingly important roles in entrepreneurship, fostering economic growth both through the wider regional economy (RE) and their own university EEs (UEEs). Entrepreneurs in residence (EiRs), chosen by universities as exemplar entrepreneurs, therefore provide potentially important conduits between the regional economy, UEEs and entrepreneurs, leading us to explore how and why do EiRs and universities interact in relation to entrepreneurial ecosystems to enhance the regional economy? Our qualitative study of a UK university case, conducted in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic which severely impacted many businesses’ access to resources, gives a particular temporal context to this research. It identifies accessing resources, building legitimacy and undertaking bridging activities as the three highest-level dimensions characterising EiR–university interactions, which have relevance for both the UEE and regional economy more widely, offering a framework for future EiR programmes. This study contributes to the regional entrepreneurship and EE literature, by examining the role of regional universities as anchor tenants and catalysts of entrepreneurial growth and resilience within regions, and calls for further research into the evolution of EiR–university interactions in different institutional contexts.

KW - regional entrepreneurship

KW - M11

KW - M16

KW - M13

KW - university entrepreneurship

KW - COVID-19; resilience; evolution

KW - I23

KW - L21

KW - O11

KW - L25

KW - entrepreneurial ecosystems

KW - F23

KW - Entrepreneurs in residence

KW - L53

U2 - 10.1080/21681376.2024.2374995

DO - 10.1080/21681376.2024.2374995

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

SP - 441

EP - 452

JO - Regional Studies, Regional Science

JF - Regional Studies, Regional Science

SN - 2168-1376

IS - 1

ER -