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Rethinking embeddedness : a review and research agenda

Wigren-Kristoferson, Caroline LU ; Brundin, Ethel ; Hellerstedt, Karin ; Stevenson, Anna LU and Aggestam, Maria LU (2022) In Entrepreneurship and Regional Development 34(1-2). p.32-56
Abstract

We conduct a comprehensive review of embeddedness in entrepreneurship research. Although the term “embeddedness” is frequently used in this field of study, less is known about the ways in which it is operationalized and applied. Using criterion sampling, we analyse 198 articles in order to investigate how embeddedness is conceptualized and what role it plays in the extant entrepreneurship literature. We categorize our findings based on different phases of the entrepreneurial process (early, mature and exit) and outline the dominant focus and the main conceptualization of embeddedness for each phase. We highlight important learnings for each of the three phases and identify potential areas for conceptual development. Across the phases,... (More)

We conduct a comprehensive review of embeddedness in entrepreneurship research. Although the term “embeddedness” is frequently used in this field of study, less is known about the ways in which it is operationalized and applied. Using criterion sampling, we analyse 198 articles in order to investigate how embeddedness is conceptualized and what role it plays in the extant entrepreneurship literature. We categorize our findings based on different phases of the entrepreneurial process (early, mature and exit) and outline the dominant focus and the main conceptualization of embeddedness for each phase. We highlight important learnings for each of the three phases and identify potential areas for conceptual development. Across the phases, we find that embeddedness and context are often used interchangeably. We thus call for construct clarity in the field. In the existing literature, entrepreneurs are generally portrayed as reactive to embeddedness, resulting in a loss of entrepreneurial agency. To remedy this, we introduce the term agencement, which takes into account the relationship between the entrepreneurship and embeddedness. Further, entrepreneurs are found to be embedded in multiple contexts at the same time, and embeddedness can be understood at different levels and to different degrees. To address this complexity, it is relevant to focus on the embedding process itself, acknowledging that it takes place in social interactions including cultural, cognitive, and emotional aspects between contexts and across levels. While the extant literature supports the notion that embeddedness is important for understanding entrepreneurship and entrepreneurs, it does not necessarily support our understanding of how embeddedness takes form or why it takes certain forms. We therefore include a call for future research to turn to process and practice theories.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
agencement, early, embeddedness, Entrepreneurship, literature review, mature and exit phases, micro-social theories, process and practice theories
in
Entrepreneurship and Regional Development
volume
34
issue
1-2
pages
25 pages
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • scopus:85123486353
ISSN
0898-5626
DOI
10.1080/08985626.2021.2021298
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
6ba02751-f326-4414-bbb7-12f5a68715dc
date added to LUP
2022-04-08 14:52:37
date last changed
2022-04-24 02:17:09
@article{6ba02751-f326-4414-bbb7-12f5a68715dc,
  abstract     = {{<p>We conduct a comprehensive review of embeddedness in entrepreneurship research. Although the term “embeddedness” is frequently used in this field of study, less is known about the ways in which it is operationalized and applied. Using criterion sampling, we analyse 198 articles in order to investigate how embeddedness is conceptualized and what role it plays in the extant entrepreneurship literature. We categorize our findings based on different phases of the entrepreneurial process (early, mature and exit) and outline the dominant focus and the main conceptualization of embeddedness for each phase. We highlight important learnings for each of the three phases and identify potential areas for conceptual development. Across the phases, we find that embeddedness and context are often used interchangeably. We thus call for construct clarity in the field. In the existing literature, entrepreneurs are generally portrayed as reactive to embeddedness, resulting in a loss of entrepreneurial agency. To remedy this, we introduce the term agencement, which takes into account the relationship between the entrepreneurship and embeddedness. Further, entrepreneurs are found to be embedded in multiple contexts at the same time, and embeddedness can be understood at different levels and to different degrees. To address this complexity, it is relevant to focus on the embedding process itself, acknowledging that it takes place in social interactions including cultural, cognitive, and emotional aspects between contexts and across levels. While the extant literature supports the notion that embeddedness is important for understanding entrepreneurship and entrepreneurs, it does not necessarily support our understanding of how embeddedness takes form or why it takes certain forms. We therefore include a call for future research to turn to process and practice theories.</p>}},
  author       = {{Wigren-Kristoferson, Caroline and Brundin, Ethel and Hellerstedt, Karin and Stevenson, Anna and Aggestam, Maria}},
  issn         = {{0898-5626}},
  keywords     = {{agencement; early; embeddedness; Entrepreneurship; literature review; mature and exit phases; micro-social theories; process and practice theories}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1-2}},
  pages        = {{32--56}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  series       = {{Entrepreneurship and Regional Development}},
  title        = {{Rethinking embeddedness : a review and research agenda}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08985626.2021.2021298}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/08985626.2021.2021298}},
  volume       = {{34}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}