Evolving missions and university entrepreneurship: academic spin-offs and graduate start-ups in the entrepreneurial society

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Abstract

A recent call has urged to broaden the conceptualization of university
entrepreneurship in order to appreciate the heterogeneity of contexts and actors involved in the process of entrepreneurial creation. A gap still persists in the understanding of the variety of ventures generated by different academic stakeholders, and the relationships between these entrepreneurial developments and university missions, namely, teaching and research. This paper addresses this particular gap by looking at how university teaching and research activities influence universities’ entrepreneurial ventures such as academic spin-offs and graduate start-ups. Empirically, we analyse the English higher education sector, drawing on institutional data at the university level. First, we explore the ways in
which teaching and research activities are configured, and secondly, we examine how such configurations relate to academic spin-offs and graduate start-ups cross different universities over time. Our findings suggest, first, that the evolution of USOs and graduate start-ups exhibit two different pathways over time; and second, that teaching and research both affect entrepreneurial ventures but their effect is different.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Technology Transfer
Early online date9 Sept 2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Feb 2019

Keywords

  • Academic entrepreneurship
  • Graduate start-ups
  • University spin-offs
  • Teaching
  • Research

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