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Teresa Nelson

Researcher at Simmons College

Publications -  30
Citations -  2302

Teresa Nelson is an academic researcher from Simmons College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Entrepreneurship & Initial public offering. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 30 publications receiving 2041 citations. Previous affiliations of Teresa Nelson include University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign & Suffolk University.

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Entrepreneurship Research in Emergence: Past Trends and Future Directions:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors apply boundary and exchange concepts to examine 97 entrepreneurship articles published in leading management journals from 1985 to 1999 and find evidence of an upward trend in the number of published entrepreneurship articles, although the percentage of entrepreneurship articles remains low.
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The persistence of founder influence: management, ownership, and performance effects at initial public offering

TL;DR: In this article, the authors apply a conceptual framework to questions of how, why, and when founders participate in the firms that they establish and empirically test for the persistent influence of the founder on the firm after start-up.
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How policy positions women entrepreneurs: A comparative analysis of state discourse in Sweden and the United States

TL;DR: The authors compared the positioning of women entrepreneurs through entrepreneurship policy over two decades (1989-2012) in Sweden and the United States and derived a conceptual schematic of assumptions presented through the discourse, aligning and distinguishing the U.S. and Swedish approaches.
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From servicescape to consumptionscape: a photo-elicitation study of Starbucks in the New China

TL;DR: This paper explored how young, urban Chinese consumers transform the iconic global brand Starbucks into a consumptionscape through their enactment of personally meaningful experiences, roles, and identities in the setting, and the implications for new global servicescapes in local markets are discussed.
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Moving forward: institutional perspectives on gender and entrepreneurship

TL;DR: In this article, a re-directed and purposeful attention to the design of research on gender and entrepreneurship moving forward is proposed, where the authors argue that the value of more studies on the men v. women binary and encourage research on the institutions supporting the gendered construction.