Nine major entrepreneurship, international business (IB), and
management journals used by the Financial Times to rank business schools
were examined to see if the amount of international entrepreneurship
(IE) research published in major entrepreneurship, IB, and management
journals is increasing over time. Findings from two time periods spaced
a decade apart indicate that although IE content more than doubled in
the entrepreneurship journals, only a modest increase occurred in the
international business journals and no increase occurred in the
management journals. We proposed and found that: (1) entrepreneurship
journals tend to favor replication studies while IB and management
journals prefer nonreplications; and (2) because replication is
straightforward while nonreplication is more difficult to conceptualize
and execute, there are many more replication than nonreplication IE
studies. As a result, IE studies appear more frequently in
entrepreneurship journals. Managerial and scholarly implications are
discussed.
How International is Entrepreneurship?
What role does international entrepreneurship (IE) play in
international business (IB), entrepreneurship, and management
scholarship? According to Shrader, Oviatt, and McDougall (2000), small
firms are internationalizing at an increasingly rapid pace, but due to
an emphasis on larger firms in the management and international business
literature, IE research may not be keeping pace. If true, this is a
shame, because as McDougall and Oviatt (2000, p. 902) point out,
"the intersection of international business and entrepreneurship is
of increasing importance for all those interested in either topic."
Is the increasing importance of the international marketplace to
entrepreneurs being reflected in international entrepreneurship
scholarship increasing in importance, relevance, and frequency? Have the
major entrepreneurship academic journals become more international over
time? Is the role of IE research in major entrepreneurship,
international business, and management journals increasing over time?
How prevalent is international entrepreneurship research in top
management and entrepreneurship journals? Are the types of IE articles
published in entrepreneurship journals different from the types
published in major management and IB journals?
In an effort to answer these questions, nine major
entrepreneurship, IB, and management journals used by the Financial
Times to rank business schools were examined for the amount and type of
IE content in a systematic fashion, over two time periods spaced a
decade apart. We show that (1) a dramatic increase occurs in IE content
in the top entrepreneurship journals; but (2) only a modest increase
occurs in the top international business journals and management
journals. Why did this occur?
We suggest the following. IB research focuses on what changes/is
different when a firm becomes international. Innovative IE research asks
an additional question: how does IE differ from MNE practice and theory?
In order to interest nonentrepreneurship audiences found in IB and
management journals, IE scholarship finds itself in the difficult
position of having to address both issues at once. Because replication
is straightforward while nonreplication is more difficult to
conceptualize and execute, many more replication than nonreplication IE
studies are published. Because entrepreneurship journals welcome IE
replication studies while IB and management journals prefer
nonreplication studies, IE studies appear more frequently in
entrepreneurship journals.
Defining IE Research
We begin by defining IE research. IB research is relatively well
defined in the academic literature (focusing on what changes when a firm
becomes international); IE is not. For this reason, we use IB
scholarship to help define IE.
The "international" part of international business (and,
also entrepreneurship) has been typically classified into two categories
(Ricks, Toyne, & Martinez, 1990; Werner & Brouthers, 2002;
Wright & Ricks, 1994). The first category is cross-national, in
which business activity at the firm level crosses national borders. This
category focuses on international issues that do not exist in the
domestic market. Examples include the internationalization process,
entry mode decisions, and impact of national culture differences
(Brouthers & Brouthers, 2001). Comparative studies, the second
category, involve comparisons of domestic business activity in two or
more countries (McDougall & Oviatt, 2000). We use these two
definitions to define IE research. IE scholarship deals with either
cross-national and/or comparative entrepreneurship issues.
Identifying Top Journals
We chose to define our top journals based on the Financial Times
(FT) 40 list. The list is used to compile worldwide rankings for
business schools. As a result, many business schools use the FT 40 list
to guide faculty publication. According to the Financial Times, top
entrepreneurship journals include the Journal of Business Venturing,
Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, and Journal of Small Business
Management, top IB journals include Management International Review and
the Journal of International Business Studies, and top management
journals include Strategic Management Journal (SMJ), Academy of
Management Journal (AMJ), Academy of Management Review (AMR), and
Administrative Science Quarterly (ASQ).
Similar to Werner and Brouthers (2002), we chose to review all of
the articles in the nine selected journals over two 5-year time frames,
1986-1990 and 2000-2004. According to Werner and Brouthers "[a]
five-year time frame appears to be a large enough window to balance out
any single year anomalies, but not so large that the time frame's
relevance can be questioned" (p. 584).
Werner and Brouthers (2002) used time frames separated by 16 years.
However, due to entrepreneurship's relative "youth" as a
field, we chose to use time frames separated by 10 years. Therefore,
three major entrepreneurship, two major IB journals, and four major
management journals were analyzed for articles with IE content from 1986
to 1990 and for 2000 to 2004. Articles were considered within the domain
of IE if "either the entrepreneur or the venture had to cross
national boundaries, or the author of the article had to make some
international comparisons on entrepreneurial issues," (Hisrich,
Honig-Haftel, McDougall, & Oviatt, 1996).
Results
Table 1 shows the total number of articles appearing in the three
entrepreneurship journals and two IB journals, as well as the number and
percentage of IE studies during the two time periods. From 1986 to 1990,
only 24 out of 397 articles in entrepreneurship journals dealt with IE
issues; 3.78% were cross-national articles while 2.27% were comparative
articles. International content in the three journals increased to
13.93% (61 of 438 articles) from 2000 to 2004. Cross-national content
increased to 5.94% and comparative studies increased to 7.99%. Thus, the
time period 2000-2004 showed a major increase in IE articles over the
previous time period. From 2000 to 2004, 13.93% of the top three
entrepreneurship journals articles had IE content, compared with 6.05%
from 1986 to 1990. Thus, IE content in 2000-2004 was double that of
1986-1990.
The IE articles were spread fairly evenly. The Journal of Business
Venturing had 14.63% IE content, the Journal of Small Business
Management had 14% content, and Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice had
12.90% IE content. The Journal of Business Venturing had the greatest
cross-national content (7.93%), followed by the Journal of Small
Business Management (5.33%), and Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice
(4.03%). Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice had the greatest
comparative content (8.87%), followed by Journal of Small Business
Management (8.67%), and Journal of Business Venturing (6.71%). Thus, IE
appears to be growing as an area of interest within the field of
entrepreneurship; all three top journals reflect this phenomenon.
The two top IB journals published only 10 IE articles from 1986 to
1990. Only 3.70% of the 270 studies published during this period were
IE, with 2.59% being cross-national and 1.11% comparative. From 2000 to
2004, the percentage of IE articles published in the top IB journals
increased to 4.51%. The percentage of cross-national studies remained
virtually unchanged (2.43%), while the percentage of comparative
articles increased to 2.08%. While the IB journals did publish more IE
articles, the net gain was only a mere three articles. Thus, IE does not
appear to have increased its importance in the IB journals to the degree
to which it has in entrepreneurship journals.
IE Prevalence in Top Management Journals
The results for the four management journals are shown in Table 1.
The four top management journals published only three IE (out of 752)
articles from 1986 to 1990. This represents less than one-half of 1%
(0.40%). Two of the articles were cross-national; only one was
comparative. From 2000 to 2004, only 18 IE articles were published,
1.94% of total articles. Although the number of IE articles increased
almost fivefold, IE content remained extremely low. Neither the AMJ nor
the AMR published a single IE article from 1986 to 1990. From 2000 to
2004, AMJ published nine IE articles (2.8%), split about evenly between
cross-national and comparative. From 2000 to 2004, AMR published four IE
articles (2.3%); all were comparative in nature. SMJ published three IE
articles (1.40%) from 1986 to 1990. The percentage remained relatively
unchanged (1.4%, five out of 338) for 2000-2004. Finally, ASQ did not
publish a single IE article during either time period.
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