- A-Z
- Jena Economics Rese...
- Volume 3
- Approaching the Ago...
- Autor(in)
- Erschienen
- 2. Oktober 2009
- Nummer des Discussion-Papers
-
2009-079
- Schlagwort(e)
-
Academic entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurial intentions
Entrepreneurial scientist
Gender
Theory of planned behavior
University-industry technology transfer
- Zusammenfsg.
-
This study investigates predictors of scientists’ intentions to commercialize their research through business founding. Analyzing a cross-sectional sample of 496 German scientists, we develop and test an intentions-based model of academic entrepreneurship combining personal and contextual factors. Empirical results demonstrate that intentions to start a science-based new venture are shaped by some personal characteristics (i.e., personal attitudes toward research commercialization, entrepreneurial control-beliefs, entrepreneurial self-identity, and prior entrepreneurial experience). Moreover, we find that the research context itself – i.e., normative influences of academic workplace peers – does not show a strong direct effect on entrepreneurial intentions. Moderator analyses deliver that peers have an influence primarily by person-context interactions via scientists’ sense of identification with these peers. A mediation analysis further indicates that gender-related differences in entrepreneurial control-beliefs might help explain the widely-observed low proportion of female scientist-entrepreneurs.
- article pub. typess JER
- Research article
- article languages JER
- Englisch
- article research fields JER
- entrepreneurship
- JEL-Classification for JER
- L26 - Entrepreneurship ; O33 - Technological Change: Choices and Consequences; Diffusion Processes ; O38 - Government Policy ; I23 - Higher Education Research Institutions
- URN
- urn:nbn:de:urmel-adf24154-8a95-43ac-b44f-c8ae9de07d7c2-00175557-17