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Institution

Copenhagen Business School

EducationCopenhagen, Hovedstaden, Denmark
About: Copenhagen Business School is a education organization based out in Copenhagen, Hovedstaden, Denmark. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Corporate governance & Entrepreneurship. The organization has 2194 authors who have published 9649 publications receiving 341898 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors discusses the relationship between measurement and intervention comparing conventional financial statements with intellectual capital statements and concludes that if intervention and measurement are coupled, then measurement is an input rather than an output, and then it is not to be evaluated on its reflection of reality but rather on its ability to help actors transform their reality.
Abstract: Measurement of intellectual capital is important, but not only for descriptive purposes. It is important because it enables intervention. If intervention and measurement are coupled, then measurement is an input rather than an output, and then measurement is not to be evaluated on its reflection of reality but rather on its ability to help actors transform their reality. This is particularly true for intellectual capital, which is widely accepted as part of an agenda for transformation and growth – it is a strategic/political agenda. To arrive at this conclusion, the paper discusses relationships between measurement and intervention comparing conventional financial statements with intellectual capital statements.

121 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed and validated measures of four antecedents of social entrepreneurial behavior: empathy with marginalized people, a feeling of moral obligation to help these, a high level of self-efficacy concerning the ability to effect social change and perceived availability of social support.
Abstract: Purpose – This paper aims to develop and validate measures of four constructs that have often been identified as antecedents of social entrepreneurial behavior: empathy with marginalized people, a feeling of moral obligation to help these, a high level of self-efficacy concerning the ability to effect social change and perceived availability of social support. Nomological validity is demonstrated by showing that, as specified by Mair and Noboa (2006), empathy and moral obligation are positively associated with perceived desirability and self-efficacy and social support with perceived feasibility of starting a social venture. The Social Entrepreneurial Antecedents Scale (SEAS) provides a basis for future research into the effectiveness of social entrepreneurship education, allowing us to study how different educational interventions impact the four SEAS constructs. Design/methodology/approach – The paper draws on data from two surveys of business school students. Data analysis used both exploratory factor ...

121 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors adopt a novel approach, based on narrative analysis, to address the succession process in a family business, highlighting five key themes centering on leadership style and succession, trust and communication, balance between agents, history and identity.
Abstract: Despite advances in family business research, the field would benefit from greater methodological rigor. However, rigor does not mean convergence of methodologies. In this article, the authors adopt a novel approach, based on narrative analysis, to address the succession process in a family business. This interpretive perspective is appropriate for family business studies, which address multifaceted and complex social constructs that are performed by different actors in multiple contexts. The analysis highlights five key themes centering on leadership style and succession, trust and communication, balance between agents, history and identity, and fear of losing one’s identity and social standing through the succession process.

120 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the optimal asset allocation strategy of a power utility investor who can invest in cash (a bank account), nominal bonds, and stocks (the stock index) in a model that exhibits mean-reverting stock returns and real interest rate uncertainty is provided.

120 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a comprehensive opinion-based insight to a multitude of diverse viewpoints that look at the many challenges through a technology lens is provided, with the focus on the role of digital and IS technology in climate change solutions.

120 citations


Authors

Showing all 2280 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Cass R. Sunstein11778757639
John Campbell107115056067
Nicolai J. Foss9145431803
Stewart Clegg7051723021
Robert J. Kauffman6943715762
James R. Markusen6721626362
Timo Teräsvirta6222420403
John D. Sterman6217127982
Björn Johansson6263716030
Richard L. Baskerville6128418796
Torben Pedersen6124114499
Peter Christoffersen5920815208
Saul Estrin5835916448
Ram Mudambi5623613562
Xin Li5621411450
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202329
2022144
2021584
2020534
2019453
2018452