Bookshelf

Book Review: The Evolution of a New Industry: A Genealogical Approach

May 13, 2016 2042

Cover of The Evolution of a New Industry by Israel Drori, Shmuel Ellis, and Zur ShapiraIsrael Drori, Shmuel Ellis, Zur Shapira : The Evolution of a New Industry: A Genealogical Approach. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2013. 190 pp.$45.00, cloth.

Wesley Sine of Cornell University recently published a book review for The Evolution of a New Industry: A Genealogical Approach in Administrative Science Quarterly. An excerpt from the review:

The Evolution of a New Industry is a fascinating look at the emergence of a technology cluster in Israel. The authors take the reader from the first few technology ventures during the early years after the establishment of the country of Israel, when the culture was heavily Zionist, collectivist, and quasi-socialist, through the maturation of the Israeli economy and movement toward a more Western, capitalistic, competitive culture. They examine the impact of the evolving institutional context on new ventures and the emerging technology cluster.

Current Issue Cover

Unlike some other research in this area, this book takes the institutional context seriously, examining culture and governmental policy and how they constitute the institutional environment and shape entrepreneurial outcomes. Drori, Ellis, and Shapira look not only at foundings but also at entrepreneurial processes such as how the institutional context affects the spawning processes of incumbents and how institutions affect spin-offs from existing mature organizations. They draw heavily from the population ecology literature and the research on institutions and entrepreneurship (e.g., Tolbert, David, and Sine, 2011).

You can read the full book review from Administrative Science Quarterly free for the next two weeks by clicking here. Want to know about all the latest research from Administrative Science QuarterlyClick here to sign up for e-alerts!

Business and Management INK puts the spotlight on research published in our more than 100 management and business journals. We feature an inside view of the research that’s being published in top-tier SAGE journals by the authors themselves.

View all posts by Business & Management INK

Related Articles

Tackling the Drivers of Terrorism
Public Policy
June 17, 2026

Tackling the Drivers of Terrorism

Read Now
Can Accounting Impact Employee Wellbeing?
Business and Management INK
March 3, 2026

Can Accounting Impact Employee Wellbeing?

Read Now
Women Will Inherit Trillions in the ‘Great Wealth Transfer’ – What Will They Do With It? 
Insights
December 2, 2025

Women Will Inherit Trillions in the ‘Great Wealth Transfer’ – What Will They Do With It? 

Read Now
A Box Unlocked, Not A Box Ticked: Tom Chatfield on AI and Pedagogy
Artificial Intelligence
December 1, 2025

A Box Unlocked, Not A Box Ticked: Tom Chatfield on AI and Pedagogy

Read Now
Is the Dissertation Still Considered a Rite of Passage?

Is the Dissertation Still Considered a Rite of Passage?

As a lecturer, I have observed increasing discussion among colleagues concerning the continuing value of the dissertation as an essential component of […]

Read Now
New Guide Recognizes the Value of Good Curation

New Guide Recognizes the Value of Good Curation

Media algorithms and artificial intelligence are pretty good at feeding us content we want (and lots of it), but not necessarily information […]

Read Now
The World of Criminal Psychologists Expands to Include Crimes Against Planet Earth

The World of Criminal Psychologists Expands to Include Crimes Against Planet Earth

After years of trying to understand the minds of people who hurt others, I have recently turned my attention as a criminal […]

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted