Details

De Gruyter Handbook of Business Families


De Gruyter Handbook of Business Families


ISSN 1. Aufl.

von: Michael Carney, Marleen Dieleman

129,95 €

Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 30.01.2023
ISBN/EAN: 9783110728057
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 599

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Beschreibungen

<p>The management field increasingly recognizes that most firms in the world are family firms and that these entities operate differently from the non-family firms on which most of our current management theories are based. The <em>De Gruyter Handbook of Business Families</em> brings together work from leading academics who explore emerging research themes relevant to business families, particularly drawing in new insights from adjacent disciplines that can advance the family business field. </p>
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<p>The handbook challenges the traditional notion of the "single firm–single family" that has characterized most early research on family business. Recognizing that families may simultaneously own or control multiple businesses as well as substantial wealth beyond these firms in the form of financial and non-financial assets, this handbook focuses on business families rather than the narrower construct of family business. The contributions in this handbook explore the relatively neglected dynamics between individuals with family ties that shape the interaction between family and business; business families with multiple businesses; how business families adopt formal rules and processes around their joint activities; and the institutionalization of wealth and business families in society. </p>
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<p>The <em>De Gruyter Handbook of Business Families</em> fills a gap in the family business research literature and is an essential reference work for researchers and graduate-level students in the area of business families.</p>
<p> List of Contributors </p>
<p> Chapter 1: Business Families: An Introduction <em>by Michael Carney &amp; Marleen Dieleman</em> </p>
<p> </p>
<ol>
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<p> </p>
<li> Business Families as the Family Behind the Firm </li>
<p> </p>
<p> Chapter 2: Family Businesses as Multiplex Relationships <em>by Jian Bai Li and Henning Piezunka</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 3: Family, Organization and Network: A New Approach to a Systems Theory of the Business Family <em>by</em> <em>Heiko Kleve, Lina Nagel, Tom Rüsen and Arist von Schlippe</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 4: Resilient enterprising families <em>by Sabine B. Rau</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 5: Enterprising Families: An Embeddedness Perspective on Offspring’s Entrepreneurial Career Preferences, Cognitions, and Actions <em>by Tommaso Minola, Dinah Spitzley, Giovanna Campopiano, Mara Brumana</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 6: Kinship and Family Businesses on the Move: A Review and a Research Agenda <em>by Juliette Koning and Mikheil Verver</em> </p>
<p> </p>
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<p> </p>
<li> Business Families with Multiple Businesses </li>
<p> </p>
<p> Chapter 7: Influence of Next-Generation Family Champions on New Venture Creation by Business Families: An Indian Perspective <em>by Navneet Bhatnagar and Kavil Ramachandran</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 8: "All My Firms?" Managing SEW Affective Endowments in Business Family Portfolios <em>by Nava Michael-Tsabari</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 9: Business Family Reputation, Internal Markets and Holdup Agency Costs <em>by Sophie Bacq and Robert S. Nason</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 10: The Transformative Function of Weak Institutional Environments: The case of Business Families in the Arab Middle East <em>b</em><em>y Ramzi Fathallah</em> <em>and Georges Samara</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 11: Evolutionary Long-term Entrepreneurial Processes in Business Families <em>by Peter Rosa and Zografia Bika</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 12: Entrepreneurial Multi-business Families – Evidence from Continental Europe <em>by Andrea Colli</em> </p>
<p> </p>
<strong></strong>
<p> </p>
<li> Governing the Business Family </li>
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<p> Chapter 13: Introducing "Top Governance Teams": Towards an Extension of the Family Business Cluster Model <em>by Rania Labaki and Neus Feliu</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 14: Codes of Governance for Family Businesses <em>by Carole Howorth, Martin R. Kemp, Timothy J. Nichol</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 15: Family Office Research: A Primer <em>by Myung-Seon Song</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 16: Family Wealth Governance and the Role of Advisors <em>by Nadine Kammerlander and Alexandra Bertschi-Michel</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 17: How can a Family Control its Business Without Ownership Influence? A case study of Suzuki Corp <em>by Toshio Goto</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 18: How Business Families Advance their Members’ Careers: The Case of Show Business Families <em>by</em> <em>Yasaman Gorji and Nastaran Simarasl</em> </p>
<p> </p>
<strong></strong>
<p> </p>
<li> Institutionalization of Wealth and Business Families in Society </li>
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<p> Chapter 19: Institutionalizing family legacy, reproducing dynasties <em>by</em> <em>Hanna Kuusela</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 20: The Varieties of Business Families: A Capitalist Class Perspective on Business Family Diversity <em>by Michael Carney and Robert S. Nason</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 21: Philanthropy Through Family Offices <em>by Elena Rivo-López and Mónica Villanueva-Villar</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 22: Traditional Authority in Social Context: Explaining the Relation between Types of Family and Types of Family-Controlled Business Groups <em>by Roy Suddaby, Peter Jaskiewicz, Trevor Israelsen and Ravee Chittoor</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 23: Migrant business families in Central America <em>by Allan Discua Cruz and Leonardo Centeno-Caffarena</em> </p>
<p> Chapter 24: Succession Process and the Model of Change in a Transgenerational Family Business <em>by Rodrigo Basco and Arpita Vyas</em> </p>
<p> </p>
<strong></strong>
<p> </p>
<li> The Future of Business Families Research </li>
<p> </p>
<p> Chapter 25: Business families: Promising future research directions <em>by</em> <em>Michael Carney and Marleen Dieleman</em> </p>
<p> </p>
<strong></strong>
<p> </p>
</ol>
<p> List of Figures </p>
<p> List of Tables </p>
<p> Index </p>
<ol>
<p> </p>
</ol>
<p>Michael Carney (PhD, University of Bradford, UK) is the Senior Concordia University Research Chair in Strategy and Entrepreneurship at the John Molson School of Business, Concordia University, Canada. He has published extensively on the corporate and organizational strategies of Asia’s family-owned business groups and on the development of the global institutional environment of international aviation. His research focuses on entrepreneurship and the comparative analysis of business, financial and governance systems and their influence upon the development of firm capabilities and national competitiveness. He has published in journals such as the <em>Academy of Management Journal</em>, <em>Asia Pacific Business Review</em>, <em>Asia Pacific Journal of Management</em>, <em>Economic and Industrial Democracy</em>, <em>Entrepreneurship: Theory and Practice</em>, <em>Family Business Review</em>, <em>Journal of Management Studies</em>, <em>Management and Organization Review</em>, <em>Organization Studies</em>, and <em>Strategic Management Journal</em>. </p>
<p></p>
<strong></strong>
<p>Marleen Dieleman (PhD, Leiden University, the Netherlands) is Associate Professor of Strategy and Family Business at NUS Business School at the National University of Singapore. Her research focuses on the strategy and governance of Asian family business groups. Her publications are mostly based on qualitative research, exploring how firms navigate the boundaries with institutions in emerging markets, in particular in Southeast Asia. She has published widely, including academic articles in journals such as the <em>Journal of Management Studies</em>, <em>Organization Studies</em>, <em>Journal of World Business</em> and others. She has also published two books, various book chapters and numerous cases. Her work has been cited regularly in popular press, including the <em>Economist</em> and the <em>Financial Times</em>.</p>