This article offers reflections based on the special issue on unsettling entrepreneurship education (EEP 3(3)) in which contributions have resisted the tendency to see students as consumers with the ‘right’ to take part in entrepreneurship education (EE) so as to effectively shape their enterprising selves. Here we resume our editorial discussions of what unsettling entrepreneurship education could mean for us – as entrepreneurship researchers and as teachers – and seek to mark out new directions both for research and education by reflecting upon ethical perspectives, identity work, and how EE can be seen to create an affective and emotional workspace. These aspects not only invite us to ask new research questions, but may also challenge ou...
During the course of the past 30 years, a challenge made to entrepreneurship educators has gone unad...
Yet it is not for denying the will and the capacity of each human being to assert him/herself by an...
In the following article we aim to give the reader an insight into the problems we have encountered ...
This article offers reflections based on the special issue on unsettling entrepreneurship educatio...
Purpose - An emerging scholarly critique has claimed that entrepreneurial education triggers more ne...
This special issue confronts taken-for-granted views on entrepreneurship education (EE), raises crit...
Society believes education is necessary to provide pupils with the knowledge and abilities to explor...
Within mainstream scholarship, it’s assumed without question that entrepreneurship and entrepreneurs...
This article provides a philosophical conceptualization of how learners engage in entrepreneurial le...
Purpose The article suggests that the international financial and economic crisis in 2008 produced ...
Purpose: Following the example of the critical management education tradition, the purpose of this p...
Purpose – This paper seeks to focus on two questions. First, what value is created by entrepreneursh...
© 2021 Sam Joshua OldhamIn recent decades, the idea of entrepreneurship education (EE) has been vigo...
Entrepreneurship education is a long-life education learning process. Entrepreneurship education (EE...
In this essay we explore some central societal and educational problems that educators ought to addr...
During the course of the past 30 years, a challenge made to entrepreneurship educators has gone unad...
Yet it is not for denying the will and the capacity of each human being to assert him/herself by an...
In the following article we aim to give the reader an insight into the problems we have encountered ...
This article offers reflections based on the special issue on unsettling entrepreneurship educatio...
Purpose - An emerging scholarly critique has claimed that entrepreneurial education triggers more ne...
This special issue confronts taken-for-granted views on entrepreneurship education (EE), raises crit...
Society believes education is necessary to provide pupils with the knowledge and abilities to explor...
Within mainstream scholarship, it’s assumed without question that entrepreneurship and entrepreneurs...
This article provides a philosophical conceptualization of how learners engage in entrepreneurial le...
Purpose The article suggests that the international financial and economic crisis in 2008 produced ...
Purpose: Following the example of the critical management education tradition, the purpose of this p...
Purpose – This paper seeks to focus on two questions. First, what value is created by entrepreneursh...
© 2021 Sam Joshua OldhamIn recent decades, the idea of entrepreneurship education (EE) has been vigo...
Entrepreneurship education is a long-life education learning process. Entrepreneurship education (EE...
In this essay we explore some central societal and educational problems that educators ought to addr...
During the course of the past 30 years, a challenge made to entrepreneurship educators has gone unad...
Yet it is not for denying the will and the capacity of each human being to assert him/herself by an...
In the following article we aim to give the reader an insight into the problems we have encountered ...