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Students climbing the entrepreneurial ladder: Family social capital and environment-related motives in hospitality and tourism

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Students climbing the entrepreneurial ladder: Family social capital and environment-related motives in hospitality and tourism. / Campopiano, Giovanna; Minola, Tommaso; Sainaghi, Ruggero.
In: International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, Vol. 28, No. 6, 13.06.2016, p. 1115-1136.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Campopiano, G, Minola, T & Sainaghi, R 2016, 'Students climbing the entrepreneurial ladder: Family social capital and environment-related motives in hospitality and tourism', International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, vol. 28, no. 6, pp. 1115-1136. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCHM-05-2014-0236

APA

Vancouver

Campopiano G, Minola T, Sainaghi R. Students climbing the entrepreneurial ladder: Family social capital and environment-related motives in hospitality and tourism. International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management. 2016 Jun 13;28(6):1115-1136. doi: 10.1108/IJCHM-05-2014-0236

Author

Campopiano, Giovanna ; Minola, Tommaso ; Sainaghi, Ruggero. / Students climbing the entrepreneurial ladder : Family social capital and environment-related motives in hospitality and tourism. In: International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management. 2016 ; Vol. 28, No. 6. pp. 1115-1136.

Bibtex

@article{f6e83e9f382c4b13afebc1488917f1e0,
title = "Students climbing the entrepreneurial ladder: Family social capital and environment-related motives in hospitality and tourism",
abstract = "PurposeThis paper aims to address the research question of whether family social capital affects the degree of engagement in the entrepreneurial process in the case of hospitality and tourism (H&T) new ventures, and how this relates to environment-related motivations. In particular, drawing on a process-based approach of individuals{\textquoteright} engagement in entrepreneurship, this paper provides new insights into the relationship between the perception of support by the family through the provision of bonding and bridging social capital and the decision to engage in the entrepreneurial process. The main contribution consists in the role of “following an environmental mission” that emerges as a motivation mediating the relationship between family resource provision and entrepreneurial engagement in the H&T industry. Design/methodology/approachFor this exploratory study, we rely on cross-sectional observations from 2,923 individuals gathered through the Global University Entrepreneurial Spirit Students Survey, which collects information on career choices and preferences of university students around the globe. Given our focus on the early engagement process in entrepreneurship and the role of embeddedness in family structures, the use of a sample of young potential entrepreneurs such as students is particularly appropriate. FindingsThis study suggests that the family acts as a fundamental institution fostering entrepreneurship, both through the provision of bonding and bridging social capital, and the nurturing of attitudes toward the environment. The results indicate that, in the H&T industry, entrepreneurship can be a valuable means to pursue such attitude and is perceived as a way to proactively contribute to undertake responsible environmental activities. Research limitations/implicationsThe study provides some implications for researchers, educators and policymakers interested in fostering entrepreneurial initiatives in the field, considering the role of a social-oriented mission as a vehicle to encourage profit-oriented entrepreneurial initiatives, and the importance of the family as a resource provider that fosters entrepreneurial engagement. The paper also discusses the strengths and limitations of this unique and broad cross-national sample. Originality/valueBecoming entrepreneurs is depicted as climbing an entrepreneurial “ladder”, whereby each individual{\textquoteright}s engagement along this process depends on a number of antecedents. Family bridging and bonding social capital, as well as following an environmental mission, emerge as important factors in the H&T industry, thus extending previous literature on the distinctiveness of this industry.",
keywords = "Entrepreneurial ladder, Entrepreneurship, Environmental mission, Family embeddedness, Family social capital, GUESSS",
author = "Giovanna Campopiano and Tommaso Minola and Ruggero Sainaghi",
year = "2016",
month = jun,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1108/IJCHM-05-2014-0236",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
pages = "1115--1136",
journal = "International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management",
issn = "0959-6119",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Students climbing the entrepreneurial ladder

T2 - Family social capital and environment-related motives in hospitality and tourism

AU - Campopiano, Giovanna

AU - Minola, Tommaso

AU - Sainaghi, Ruggero

PY - 2016/6/13

Y1 - 2016/6/13

N2 - PurposeThis paper aims to address the research question of whether family social capital affects the degree of engagement in the entrepreneurial process in the case of hospitality and tourism (H&T) new ventures, and how this relates to environment-related motivations. In particular, drawing on a process-based approach of individuals’ engagement in entrepreneurship, this paper provides new insights into the relationship between the perception of support by the family through the provision of bonding and bridging social capital and the decision to engage in the entrepreneurial process. The main contribution consists in the role of “following an environmental mission” that emerges as a motivation mediating the relationship between family resource provision and entrepreneurial engagement in the H&T industry. Design/methodology/approachFor this exploratory study, we rely on cross-sectional observations from 2,923 individuals gathered through the Global University Entrepreneurial Spirit Students Survey, which collects information on career choices and preferences of university students around the globe. Given our focus on the early engagement process in entrepreneurship and the role of embeddedness in family structures, the use of a sample of young potential entrepreneurs such as students is particularly appropriate. FindingsThis study suggests that the family acts as a fundamental institution fostering entrepreneurship, both through the provision of bonding and bridging social capital, and the nurturing of attitudes toward the environment. The results indicate that, in the H&T industry, entrepreneurship can be a valuable means to pursue such attitude and is perceived as a way to proactively contribute to undertake responsible environmental activities. Research limitations/implicationsThe study provides some implications for researchers, educators and policymakers interested in fostering entrepreneurial initiatives in the field, considering the role of a social-oriented mission as a vehicle to encourage profit-oriented entrepreneurial initiatives, and the importance of the family as a resource provider that fosters entrepreneurial engagement. The paper also discusses the strengths and limitations of this unique and broad cross-national sample. Originality/valueBecoming entrepreneurs is depicted as climbing an entrepreneurial “ladder”, whereby each individual’s engagement along this process depends on a number of antecedents. Family bridging and bonding social capital, as well as following an environmental mission, emerge as important factors in the H&T industry, thus extending previous literature on the distinctiveness of this industry.

AB - PurposeThis paper aims to address the research question of whether family social capital affects the degree of engagement in the entrepreneurial process in the case of hospitality and tourism (H&T) new ventures, and how this relates to environment-related motivations. In particular, drawing on a process-based approach of individuals’ engagement in entrepreneurship, this paper provides new insights into the relationship between the perception of support by the family through the provision of bonding and bridging social capital and the decision to engage in the entrepreneurial process. The main contribution consists in the role of “following an environmental mission” that emerges as a motivation mediating the relationship between family resource provision and entrepreneurial engagement in the H&T industry. Design/methodology/approachFor this exploratory study, we rely on cross-sectional observations from 2,923 individuals gathered through the Global University Entrepreneurial Spirit Students Survey, which collects information on career choices and preferences of university students around the globe. Given our focus on the early engagement process in entrepreneurship and the role of embeddedness in family structures, the use of a sample of young potential entrepreneurs such as students is particularly appropriate. FindingsThis study suggests that the family acts as a fundamental institution fostering entrepreneurship, both through the provision of bonding and bridging social capital, and the nurturing of attitudes toward the environment. The results indicate that, in the H&T industry, entrepreneurship can be a valuable means to pursue such attitude and is perceived as a way to proactively contribute to undertake responsible environmental activities. Research limitations/implicationsThe study provides some implications for researchers, educators and policymakers interested in fostering entrepreneurial initiatives in the field, considering the role of a social-oriented mission as a vehicle to encourage profit-oriented entrepreneurial initiatives, and the importance of the family as a resource provider that fosters entrepreneurial engagement. The paper also discusses the strengths and limitations of this unique and broad cross-national sample. Originality/valueBecoming entrepreneurs is depicted as climbing an entrepreneurial “ladder”, whereby each individual’s engagement along this process depends on a number of antecedents. Family bridging and bonding social capital, as well as following an environmental mission, emerge as important factors in the H&T industry, thus extending previous literature on the distinctiveness of this industry.

KW - Entrepreneurial ladder

KW - Entrepreneurship

KW - Environmental mission

KW - Family embeddedness

KW - Family social capital

KW - GUESSS

U2 - 10.1108/IJCHM-05-2014-0236

DO - 10.1108/IJCHM-05-2014-0236

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84975034827

VL - 28

SP - 1115

EP - 1136

JO - International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management

JF - International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management

SN - 0959-6119

IS - 6

ER -