scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Black Entrepreneurship in America

Shelley Green, +1 more
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Black Entrepreneurship in America as discussed by the authors defines the cultural context of economic changes taking place in this most critical segment of American life and provides fresh thinking about black values, institutions and economics.
Abstract
At a time of rapid economic change in black American communities, this important study provides fresh thinking about black values, institutions and economics. Black Entrepreneurship in America defines the cultural context of economic changes taking place in this most critical segment of American life. It is well known that economic culture undergoes constant generation and regeneration, and with sufficient motivation, culture change; analysts also agree that entrepreneurship is the driving force behind sustained economic progress in modern industrial societies. This volume shows how black Americans can become equal participants in the American dream. To do this, the authors argue, they must overcome their former lack of participation, and galvanize the entrepreneurial potential of their own families and communities. This bold and pioneering effort outlines a strategy for translating the overall expansion of the American economy into specific modes of black economic development. As the authors emphasize, the impetus for change must come from within the black communities. Despite good intentions and a twenty-five fold increase in welfare spending since 1967, centrally designed and administered social programs have largely failed to strengthen the indigenous cultural institutions upon which economic advancement depends. Low levels of business growth have retarded savings, investments, and jobs within black communities. This book describes how public policy decisions can support community-based entrepreneurship. Solidly grounded, the conclusions are based on interview data, consultations with a wide variety of academic and business experts, and a thorough review of relevant literature. The book will be of great interest to social researchers and policy analysts interested in black studies and social and economic change.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Handbook of economic sociology

TL;DR: The Handbook of Economic Sociology as mentioned in this paper provides a comprehensive view of this vital and growing field, including sociologists, economists, and political scientists, as well as a survey of economic sociology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gaining the upper hand: Economic mobility among immigrant and domestic minorities

TL;DR: In this article, the labour market experiences of three immigrant minorities in the United States are reviewed and contrasted with the three principal theories bearing on ethnic poverty and economic mobility: cultural assimilation, human capital acquisition, and industrial restructuring.
Journal ArticleDOI

Community Social Responsibility and Its Consequences for Family Business Performance

TL;DR: This paper explored the antecedents and consequences of family-centered businesses' socially responsible behavior in the context of socially responsible business practices, and found that family businesses may have unique perspectives of social responsible behavior due to family involvement and ties to the community.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pieces of the Action: Ownership and the Changing Employment Relationship

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors develop theory specifying the role of ownership in the employment relationship and address how sharing in ownership's privileges can create convergent psychological contracts between workers and employers, and also outline a research agenda to investigate how allocating ownership to workers impacts their interests and those of managers and investors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of ethnicity, families and culture on entrepreneurial experience: an extension of sustainable family business theory

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address the complex dynamic of ethnic firms with three purposes: (a) to provide a cultural context for the three ethnic groups composing the National Minority Business Owner Study; (b) to extend the sustainable family business theory, a dynamic, behaviorally-based, multi-dimensional family firm theory, by clarifying how it accommodates ethnic firm complexities within their cultural context, and (c) to derive implications for research, education and consulting with worldwide applications.
Related Papers (5)