Beyond cultural values? Cultural leadership ideals and entrepreneurship


Autoria(s): Stephan, Ute; Pathak, Saurav
Data(s)

01/09/2016

Resumo

This paper offers a fresh perspective on national culture and entrepreneurship research. It explores the role of Culturally-endorsed implicit Leadership Theories (CLTs) – i.e., the cultural expectations about outstanding, ideal leadership – on individual entrepreneurship. Developing arguments based on culture-entrepreneurship fit, we predict that charismatic and self-protective CLTs positively affect entrepreneurship. They provide a context that enables entrepreneurs to be co-operative in order to initiate change but also to be self-protective and competitive so as to safeguard their venture and avoid being exploited. We further theorize that CLTs are more proximal drivers of cross-country differences in entrepreneurship as compared with distal cultural values. We find support for our propositions in a multi-level study of 42 countries. Cultural values (of uncertainty avoidance and collectivism) influence entrepreneurship mainly indirectly, via charismatic and self-protective CLTs. We do not find a similar indirect effect for cultural practices.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/28821/1/Stephan_Pathak_cultural_values_cultural_leadership_ideals_JBV_2016.pdf

Stephan, Ute and Pathak, Saurav (2016). Beyond cultural values? Cultural leadership ideals and entrepreneurship. Journal of Business Venturing, 31 (5), pp. 505-523.

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/28821/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed