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E-raamat: Native and Immigrant Entrepreneurship: Lessons for Local Liabilities in Globalization from the Prato Case Study

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Jan-2017
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319441115
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-Jan-2017
  • Kirjastus: Springer International Publishing AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783319441115

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This book adopts a multidisciplinary approach to the issue of "local liabilities", drawing on close analysis of the case of Chinese migrants in the Italian industrial district of Prato in order to elucidate the problems, or liabilities, that derive from the separation between natives and immigrants in local systems of people and firms. Insights are offered from a variety of disciplines, including business and industrial economics, anthropology, and sociology, thereby providing a framework through which to view the problems and also identifying potential pathways for their evolution and resolution. The focus on local liabilities affords an original perspective on the nature of globalization and highlights salient aspects of native and immigrant entrepreneurship. Globalization not only creates "bridges" between distant places but also changes the face of businesses and socioeconomic systems at the local level, where local liabilities may emerge when two or more separate communities

(of persons and firms) exist. The greater the separation between the communities, the greater the local liabilities. In offering diverse perspectives on this relatively neglected aspect of globalization, the book will be of interest to a wide readership. This book adopts a multidisciplinary approach to the issue of "local liabilities", drawing on close analysis of the case of Chinese migrants and the Italian industrial district of Prato in order to elucidate the problems, or liabilities, that derive from the separation between natives and immigrants in local systems of people and firms. Insights are offered from a variety of disciplines, including business and industrial economics, anthropology, and sociology, thereby providing a framework through which to view the problems and also identifying potential pathways for their evolution and resolution. The focus on local liabilities affords an original perspective on the nature of globalization and highlights salient aspects of native

and immigrant entrepreneurship. Globalization not only creates "bridges" between distant places but also changes the face of businesses and socioeconomic systems at the local level, where local liabilities may emerge when two or more separate communities (of persons and firms) exist. The greater the separation between the communities, the greater the local liabilities. In offering diverse perspectives on this relatively neglected aspect of globalization, the book will be of interest to a wide readership.
Introduction 1(6)
Simone Guercini
Gabi Dei Ottati
Loretta Baldassar
Graeme Johanson
Liabilities of Native and Immigrant Entrepreneurship in the Processes of Globalization
7(24)
Simone Guercini
Gabi Dei Ottati
Loretta Baldassar
Graeme Johanson
Chinese Immigration to Italy and Economic Relations with the Homeland: A Multiscalar Perspective
31(22)
Eduardo Barberis
Alberto Violante
A Social Accounting Matrix for Prato: Interrelating the Chinese Migrant Community and the Provincial Economy
53(26)
Paola Biasi
Stefano Rosignoli
Ethnography of the Fast Fashion Community: Chinese Entrepreneurs in Prato
79(18)
Stefano Becucci
Italian-Schooled Chinese Migrant Youth in Prato: The Liability of Outsidership and Social Identity Formation
97(18)
Adua Paciocco
Loretta Baldassar
Smartphones and Outsidership in Prato's Small Business Community
115(18)
Graeme Johanson
Francesco Beghelli
Anja Fladrich
Liabilities of Foreignness and Outsidership in the Evolution of Immigrant Chinese Entrepreneurship
133(16)
Simone Guercini
Matilde Milanesi
Liabilities in Prato's Industrial District: An Analysis of Italian and Chinese Firm Failures
149(20)
Luciana Lazzeretti
Francesco Capone
The Mechanism of Sustained Immigrant Entrepreneurship: Wenzhounese Immigrants in Italy
169(20)
Yili Zhang
Min Zhang
Understanding Chinese Immigrants in Prato's Industrial District: Benefits to Local Entrepreneurs
189(20)
Xander Ong
Susan Freeman
Concluding Remarks: The Benefits of Overcoming Local Liabilities
209
Simone Guercini
Gabi Dei Ottati
Loretta Baldassar
Graeme Johanson
Simone Guercini is a Professor of Management at the University of Florence and visiting professor at the Grenoble Graduate School of Business. His research interests include business marketing, heuristics in business, entrepreneurship in communities, and internationalization, with a special focus on the Italian fashion industry. Simone received his PhD in economics from SantAnna School of Advanced Studies, Pisa.  Gabi Dei Ottati is a Professor of Applied Economics at the University of Florence and a member of the European Research Centre on Regional and Local Development. Her main research interests include industrial organization and economic development, with a special focus on Italy and industrial districts. Having collaborated for many years with Giacomo Becattini, the revitalizer of the Marshallian industrial district concept, she is part of the Florence school of local development.  Loretta Baldassar is a Professor of Anthropology and Sociology at the University of Western Australia, and Adjunct Principal Research Fellow at the School of Political and Social Inquiry, Monash University. Her research interests focus on transnational migrants, families, and caregiving, including the question of generations. Loretta received her PhD from the University of Western Australia.  Graeme Johanson is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at Monash University. His research interests include social informatics, virtual communities, and e-democracy, with a focus on migration and transnationalism. Graeme received his PhD in economics from Monash University.