Institution
IE University
Education•Segovia, Castilla y León, Spain•
About: IE University is a education organization based out in Segovia, Castilla y León, Spain. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Corporate governance & Supply chain. The organization has 527 authors who have published 1709 publications receiving 64682 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The authors examined the relationship between group boundary spanners' work group identification and effective (i.e., harmonious and productive) intergroup relations in 53 work groups in five health care organizations.
Abstract: We examined the relationship between group boundary spanners' work group identification and effective (i. E., harmonious and productive) intergroup relations in 53 work groups in five health care organizations. The data suggest this relationship was moderated by boundary spanners' levels of organizational identification, thus supporting a dual identity model. Limited support was found for the moderating effect of intergroup contact. Finally, if boundary spanners displayed frequent intergroup contact and identified highly with their organization, group identification was most strongly related to effective intergroup relations.
333 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify the family ownership group as the appropriate unit of entrepreneurial analysis and delineate the entrepreneurial strategy methods and family-as-investor mind-set that create the enterprising families domain.
Abstract: The field of family business studies has not explicitly identified the entrepreneurial potential of the family ownership group or adequately delineated the strategic requirements for sustaining wealth creation across generations. To address such issues, this paper presents the parameters for family-influenced transgenerational wealth creation. It identifies the family ownership group as the appropriate unit of entrepreneurial analysis and delineates the entrepreneurial strategy methods and family-as-investor mind-set that create the enterprising families domain. In so doing, the paper creates a true nexus between the fields of entrepreneurial strategy and family business studies.
327 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a methodology to measure population-based social entrepreneurship activity (SEA) prevalence rates and test it in 49 countries, using the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) methodology of Total Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA).
Abstract: Although there is a high level of practitioner, policymaker, and scholar interest in social entrepreneurship, most research is based on case studies and success stories of successful social entrepreneurs in a single country. We develop a methodology to measure population-based social entrepreneurship activity (SEA) prevalence rates and test it in 49 countries. Our results provide insights into institutional and individual drivers of SEA. Using the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) methodology of Total Entrepreneurial Activity (TEA), we find that countries with higher rates of traditional entrepreneurial activity also tend to have higher rates of social entrepreneurial activity. We develop a broad definition of social entrepreneurship and then explore types based on social mission, revenue model, and innovativeness.
323 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the antecedents of intraorganizational trust and how the frequency of communication between trustor and trustee moderates the impact of these factors on perceived trustworthiness was investigated.
Abstract: This paper investigates the antecedents of intraorganizational trust and, more specifically, how the frequency of communication between trustor and trustee moderates the impact of these factors on perceived trustworthiness. Data on 157 dyadic relationships among 50 senior managers within a multinational corporation confirm that the effect of both trustor, as well as trustee characteristics on the level of perceived trustworthiness, is moderated by the frequency of communication between the two parties. As communication frequency increases, the trustor's general attitudinal predisposition towards peers becomes less important as a determinant of his/her evaluation of trustworthiness of other managers within the organization. In contrast, as communication frequency increases, the trustor's and trustee's contexts within the organization become more important determinants of perceived trustworthiness.
316 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors extended the arguments surrounding carbon lock-in elaborated in Unruh (Energy Policy 28 (2000) 817; 30 (2002) 317) to countries currently undergoing industrialization.
301 citations
Authors
Showing all 569 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Andreas Richter | 110 | 769 | 48262 |
Martin J. Conyon | 49 | 131 | 10026 |
Mahmoud Ezzamel | 49 | 138 | 7116 |
Mauro F. Guillén | 45 | 148 | 11899 |
Kazuhisa Bessho | 43 | 223 | 5490 |
Bryan W. Husted | 40 | 104 | 7369 |
Luis Garicano | 40 | 119 | 7446 |
Marc Goergen | 38 | 209 | 5677 |
Diego Miranda-Saavedra | 38 | 59 | 7559 |
Cipriano Forza | 37 | 84 | 6426 |
Dimo Dimov | 33 | 117 | 6158 |
Gordon Murray | 32 | 90 | 5604 |
Pascual Berrone | 29 | 64 | 7732 |
Albert Maydeu-Olivares | 27 | 37 | 3470 |
Jelena Zikic | 26 | 46 | 2398 |