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The research shows that carve-out education can enhance entrepreneur intention indirectly by updating students’ knowledge, cultivating their entrepreneurial abilities and reinforcing their determination.
They are mainly related to the cultural contexts, which affect the propensity to become an entrepreneur
The authors propose a new framework for corporate-entrepreneur collaborations to advance a CE.
A multilevel analysis based on a random sample of 834 Finnish working-age individuals, combined with the official national statistics at the municipality level supports the proposition that regional conditions have an indirect impact on the intent to become an entrepreneur.
Results show that there are significant differences across countries in terms of who becomes an entrepreneur.
We first argue that the entrepreneur exists in a much broader institutional context than current economic models of entrepreneurship consider.
We find that the desire to become an entrepreneur is basically determined by individual and household characteristics, including income and asset indicators, and not as much by the current job situation of the individual.
Our results show that for a university to become an entrepreneur, it has to undergo internal transformations.
Nonetheless, it is unlikely entrepreneur research can become anything near a general science.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ian Deamer, Louise Earle 
48 Citations
The authors argue that entrepreneurship is a multidimensional construct and that EMAQ can give insight into whether a person might succeed as an entrepreneur.
The findings are less clear in regards to the link between general education and the choice to become an entrepreneur.
This implies that skills acquired from any previous founding experience can make an entrepreneur perform better and in turn attract more venture capital.
At the same time, we need a new type of entrepreneur: one who is the product of institutions where sustainability is taught and exercised.
It places the entrepreneur at the forefront of the Transitional Economy and identifies the entrepreneur as a catalyst for change and progress.