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The Achieving Society

TLDR
The authors argued that cultural customs and motivations, especially the motivation for achievement, are the major catalysts of economic growth and proposed a plan to accelerate economic growth in developing countries by encouraging and supplementing their achievement motives through mobilizing the greater achievement resources of developed countries.
Abstract
Examines the motivation for achievement as a psychological factor that shapes economic development. Refuting arguments based on race, climate, or population growth, the book instead argues for cultural customs and motivations - especially the motivation for achievement - as the major catalysts of economic growth. Considering the Protestant Reformation, the rise of capitalism, parents' influences on sons, and folklore and children's stories as shaping cultural motivations for achievement, the book hypothesizes that a high level of achievement motivation precedes economic growth. This is supported through qualitative analysis of the achievement motive, as well as of other psychological factors - including entrepreneurial behavior and characteristics, and available sources of achievement in past and present highly achieving societies. It is the achievement motive - and not merely the profit motive or the desire for material gain - that has advanced societies economically. Consequently, individuals are not merely products of their environment, as many social scientists have asserted, but also creators of the environment, as they manipulate it in various ways in the search for achievement. Finally, a plan is hypothesized to accelerate economic growth in developing countries, by encouraging and supplementing their achievement motives through mobilizing the greater achievement resources of developed countries. The conclusion is not just that motivations shape economic progress, but that current influences on future people's motivations and values will determine economic growth in the long run. Thus, it is most beneficial for a society to concentrate its resources on creating an environment conducive to entrepreneurship and a strong ideological base for achievement. (CJC)

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Why Men Rebel

R. D. Jessop
- 01 May 1971 - 
TL;DR: Why Men Rebel was first published in 1970 on the heels of a decade of political violence and protest not only in remote corners of Africa and Southeast Asia, but also at home in the United States as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

African Politics in Comparative Perspective

TL;DR: The study of politics in Africa has been extensively studied in the literature as discussed by the authors, with the focus on the economy of affection, gender, ethnicity, and the external dimension of Africa.

Entrepreneurial regions: Do macro-psychological cultural characteristics of regions help solve the “knowledge paradox” of economics?

TL;DR: For example, the authors hypothesize that the statistical relation between knowledge resources and entrepreneurial vitality in a region will depend on "hidden" regional differences in entrepreneurial culture and derive measures of entrepreneurship-prone culture from two large personality datasets from the United States and Great Britain.
Posted Content

Gem Research: Achievements and Challenges

TL;DR: This article conducted a rigorous search of articles published in journals within the Thomson Reuters' Social Sciences Citation Index® through an exploratory analysis focused on articles using Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) data.
Journal Article

Kasvun tekijät : tutkimus Suomen teollistumisen ajan perustajayrittäjistä 1870-1990

TL;DR: Möttönen et al. as discussed by the authors investigated entrepreneurs who founded successful, long-standing and high-growth companies and identified four main entrepreneur types: self-made man, practical entrepreneur, educated entrepreneur and business entrepreneur.
References
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A Comparison of Protestant Work Ethic Beliefs in Thirteen Nations

TL;DR: The authors measured and compared Protestant work ethic scores in 13 countries and found that subjects from richer, First World countries tended to have lower scores than those from Third World countries, indicating that work ethic beliefs were associated with differential weights placed on prestige, power, and wealth in a society.
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A comparative study of values among Chinese and U.S. Entrepreneurs : pragmatic convergence between contrasting cultures

TL;DR: Li et al. as mentioned in this paper studied the differences and similarities in work-related values between Chinese entrepreneurs, managers, and U.S. entrepreneurs as exploratory research and found that entrepreneurial characteristics, such as individualism, achievement motives, and self-deterministic behavior, are universal.
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Key Components and Implications of Entrepreneurship: A 4-P Framework

TL;DR: In this article, a parsimonious 4-P framework is proposed to understand the essence of entrepreneurship: pioneer, perspective, practice, and performance, and it is expected that this framework will help us better understand the theoretical underpinnings as well as its practical implications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Uncovering the relationship between workaholism and workplace destructive and constructive deviance: an exploratory study

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relationship of three workaholism components with measures of workplace destructive and constructive deviance and found that the three components were significantly related to two measures of deviance.
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nAch, Risk-taking Propensity, Locus of Control and entrepreneurship.

TL;DR: In this article, the Locus of Control and Risk-taking Propensity (LCP) and nAch were compared with the concept of entrepreneurship and significant differences were found and led to a clarification of the concept.