(Re)defining Entrepreneurship in a Post-pandemic Context - Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2023 - 1 online resource (210 p.)

Open Access

The theme of entrepreneurship in the post-pandemic context is essential for the economic and social revitalization of economies. Despite this importance, this theme has hardly been explored, and therefore one of the central aspects of this reprint is to bring the debate on the competitiveness of micro-, small-, and medium-sized enterprises in various sectors to academic discussion. Through 11 chapters, involving the collaboration of more than 30 authors, this reprint pragmatically discusses a wide range of strategies and critical success factors for fostering entrepreneurship. This reprint also presents a set of practical solutions for various sectors, from tourism to agriculture, covering several countries, from Latin America to Asia to Europe. The various chapters present very diverse methodological approaches.


Creative Commons


English

9783036574240 9783036574257 books978-3-0365-7424-0

10.3390/books978-3-0365-7424-0 doi


Business strategy

Azores barriers to innovation Can Tho city canyoning Colombia comparative study COVID-19 COVID-19 economic crisis COVID-19 pandemic digital nomads drive tourism economic capital empowerment entrepreneur entrepreneurial self-efficacy entrepreneurship financial capital financial objectives hard skills hospitality sector human capital human resources innovation innovative performance innovativeness Latin American entrepreneurship level of ability of business actors in the agricultural sector life satisfaction mitigation n/a networking organizational capabilities philanthropic CSR post-pandemic PRISMA process innovation product innovation resilience routes seizing opportunities self-confidence self-efficacy SMEs social entrepreneurial self-efficacy soft skills surf sustainable systematic literature review taking risks tourism tourism entrepreneurship tourism lifestyle entrepreneurs Venezuelan migration Vietnam workers' perceptions