Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Entrepreneurial Ecosystems in Life Science Industry : A study of start-ups, scale ups and resilience of Entrepreneurial Ecosystems

Alvedalen, Janna LU (2021)
Abstract
The Entrepreneurial Ecosystem (EE) literature has presented itself as promising in recent years, as it adopts a systemic network approach on entrepreneurship. Despite its popularity, scholars have also raised some serious concerns, showing it is yet a rather underdeveloped concept. This dissertation addresses some of critiques on the EE literature by proposing four research papers that consist of conceptual and empirical studies. The thesis contributes first and foremost to the development of the EE literature by combining insights from other literatures including the ones on entrepreneurship, regional studies, resilience and social capital.
Conceptually, the dissertation takes stock of EE research based on a thorough literature... (More)
The Entrepreneurial Ecosystem (EE) literature has presented itself as promising in recent years, as it adopts a systemic network approach on entrepreneurship. Despite its popularity, scholars have also raised some serious concerns, showing it is yet a rather underdeveloped concept. This dissertation addresses some of critiques on the EE literature by proposing four research papers that consist of conceptual and empirical studies. The thesis contributes first and foremost to the development of the EE literature by combining insights from other literatures including the ones on entrepreneurship, regional studies, resilience and social capital.
Conceptually, the dissertation takes stock of EE research based on a thorough literature review. The paper outlines the historical roots and antecedents of the EE concept, and it discusses the various definitions of EE, its constituent parts, and evolving trends in the EE literature. Most importantly, it critically assesses current findings and highlights a number of weaknesses of the EE literature. It comes to the conclusion that there is a lack of clarity with respect to a number of features of the EE concept. Based on this critical review, a future research agenda is presented that aims to tackle those weaknesses.
Empirically, the dissertation addresses some of these critiques in three empirical papers. For instance, the thesis conducts a comparative regional study and applies a multi-scalar approach to outline the specific nature and structure of EEs in Life Sciences in five regions in two countries – the US and Sweden. The role of linkages and institutions both inside and outside EEs are examined not only in general but also specifically for the scale-up process of Life Science firms in EEs. Hence, the thesis shows how EEs in different regions differ in how they support or hinder the growth of firms, highlighting the factors important specifically to productive entrepreneurship. The relative importance of factors (firm-specific and external factors) and how they influence each other are also examined. Moreover, the thesis also accounts for dynamics in EEs and their resilience. It studies a closure of a big multinational firm in an EE to see what implications it had for the functioning and transformation of the EE.
Finally, the dissertation offers a discussion on specific policies on EE that could improve the entrepreneurial performance of a region by (i) supporting an environment favorable to start-ups and growth of firms, providing basic conditions and stimuli (ii) supporting reinforcing mechanisms in EEs, and (iii) eliminating institutional and non-institutional obstacles. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Prof. Mayer, Heike, University of Bern, Switzerland.
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Entrepreneurial ecosystems, Life Sciences, Sweden, US, scale up, high-growth firms, Resilience, place leadership, social capital, entrepreneurship, closure of large firm, productive entrepreneurship
pages
220 pages
publisher
Lund University, CIRCLE - Center for Innovation, Research and Competences in the Learning Economy
defense location
Lecture hall Stora hörsalen, Ingvar Kamprad Designcentrum IKDC, Sölvegatan 26, Faculty of Engineering LTH, Lund University, Lund.
defense date
2021-02-12 9:15:00
ISBN
978-91-7895-742-2
978-91-7895-741-5
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
63d3db6b-167e-4813-b3e4-c6941d43f9e3
date added to LUP
2021-01-18 16:51:43
date last changed
2022-04-07 08:35:04
@phdthesis{63d3db6b-167e-4813-b3e4-c6941d43f9e3,
  abstract     = {{The Entrepreneurial Ecosystem (EE) literature has presented itself as promising in recent years, as it adopts a systemic network approach on entrepreneurship. Despite its popularity, scholars have also raised some serious concerns, showing it is yet a rather underdeveloped concept. This dissertation addresses some of critiques on the EE literature by proposing four research papers that consist of conceptual and empirical studies. The thesis contributes first and foremost to the development of the EE literature by combining insights from other literatures including the ones on entrepreneurship, regional studies, resilience and social capital.<br/>Conceptually, the dissertation takes stock of EE research based on a thorough literature review. The paper outlines the historical roots and antecedents of the EE concept, and it discusses the various definitions of EE, its constituent parts, and evolving trends in the EE literature. Most importantly, it critically assesses current findings and highlights a number of weaknesses of the EE literature. It comes to the conclusion that there is a lack of clarity with respect to a number of features of the EE concept. Based on this critical review, a future research agenda is presented that aims to tackle those weaknesses.<br/>Empirically, the dissertation addresses some of these critiques in three empirical papers. For instance, the thesis conducts a comparative regional study and applies a multi-scalar approach to outline the specific nature and structure of EEs in Life Sciences in five regions in two countries – the US and Sweden. The role of linkages and institutions both inside and outside EEs are examined not only in general but also specifically for the scale-up process of Life Science firms in EEs. Hence, the thesis shows how EEs in different regions differ in how they support or hinder the growth of firms, highlighting the factors important specifically to productive entrepreneurship. The relative importance of factors (firm-specific and external factors) and how they influence each other are also examined. Moreover, the thesis also accounts for dynamics in EEs and their resilience. It studies a closure of a big multinational firm in an EE to see what implications it had for the functioning and transformation of the EE.<br/>Finally, the dissertation offers a discussion on specific policies on EE that could improve the entrepreneurial performance of a region by (i) supporting an environment favorable to start-ups and growth of firms, providing basic conditions and stimuli (ii) supporting reinforcing mechanisms in EEs, and (iii) eliminating institutional and non-institutional obstacles.}},
  author       = {{Alvedalen, Janna}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-7895-742-2}},
  keywords     = {{Entrepreneurial ecosystems; Life Sciences; Sweden; US; scale up; high-growth firms; Resilience; place leadership; social capital; entrepreneurship; closure of large firm; productive entrepreneurship}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  publisher    = {{Lund University, CIRCLE - Center for Innovation, Research and Competences in the Learning Economy}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Entrepreneurial Ecosystems in Life Science Industry : A study of start-ups, scale ups and resilience of Entrepreneurial Ecosystems}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/90161275/Janna_Alvedalen_PhD_Thesis_WEBB.pdf}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}