Dark Sides of the Startup Nation

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A01=Sibylle Heilbrunn
Author_Sibylle Heilbrunn
business
Category=JP
Category=KCP
Category=KJH
Category=KJMV6
Category=KJQ
critical entrepreneurship studies
critical theory discourse
CTO
Education System
Entrepreneurial Ecosystems
Entrepreneurship
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethiopian Community
FSU Immigrant
Geographic Periphery
High Tech Company
High Tech Employees
High Tech Entrepreneurs
High Tech Entrepreneurship
High Tech Industry
IIA
innovation
Innovation Authority
Israel
Israeli High Tech
Israeli High Tech Industry
Israeli high tech sector
Low Socioeconomic Profile
marginalized entrepreneurs
minority group mobility
National Neoliberalism
neoliberal capitalism
neoliberal economic policy
neoliberalism
Norm Circle
Office Of The Chief Scientist
social inequality research
Social Periphery
society
start-up nation
Startup Nation
structural disadvantage in innovation
Tech Entrepreneur
Technological Entrepreneurship
Tel Aviv
ultra-Orthodox Population
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367548902
  • Weight: 880g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Nov 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Israeli national neoliberalism has promoted innovation policies leading to an ostensible paradox: At the center is a startup nation with a vibrant and successful high-tech entrepreneurial ecosystem, accumulating resources and enabling constant growth. At the geographical and social periphery, there has emerged a parallel society with often-marginalized groups not able to keep up. In one of the most unequal countries with a high rate of poverty, entrepreneurial heroes are celebrated at the center, promoting a myth that all could be self-made successes. At the periphery, entrepreneurs are struggling to survive, often pushed into precarious working and living conditions.

Applying critical theory discourse, this book illustrates how neoliberalism and entrepreneurship are intertwined and how the startup nation has evolved in Israel. It explores how national neoliberal state policies have targeted technological innovation as a tool to obtain a competitive advantage in the international arena rather than aiming at increasing economic achievements and well-being for all. It will demonstrate that the Israeli entrepreneurship scene exemplifies the existence of parallel entrepreneurial societal spaces, analyze the positionality of entrepreneurs belonging to a variety of groups that characterize Israeli society, and uncover structural disadvantages and related levels of precarity as well as existing links between entrepreneurial advantages and disadvantages, mobility and varying degrees of social marginality.

Dark Sides of the Startup Nation sheds light onto the problematic and sometimes contradictory myth that entrepreneurship is meritocratic and that neoliberal capitalism provides everyone with equal opportunities to succeed. The book will be of interest to researchers, academics, policy makers and students in the fields of entrepreneurship and small business management, responsibility and business ethics, and technology and innovation.

Sibylle Heilbrunn is Full Professor of Organizational Sociology and Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities at Kinneret Academic College on the Sea of Galilee, Israel.

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