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Featured researches published by Emma Folmer.


European Planning Studies | 2013

Planning the neighbourhood economy: land-use plans and the economic potential of urban residential neighbourhoods in the Netherlands

Emma Folmer; Anne Risselada

Abstract This article investigates the relationship between zoning by-laws, as put forward in governmental land-use plans and the viability of urban residential neighbourhood economies. The Dutch planning tradition has long been characterized by strict separation of functions and top-down planning. We argue that profound changes in social and economic structures make land-use planning practices less suitable for the current policy formula of “mixed urban milieus”. Although the residential neighbourhood might not be the location of large firms, it definitely attracts small ones, and facilitates starting businesses whose presence (and potential growth) can be beneficial to the city as a whole. We present a typology of spatial patterns of neighbourhood economies based on land-use plans and describe whether these are related to the distinctive economic development of the neighbourhood over the period 1999–2007.


Journal of Urban Affairs | 2014

Entrepreneurship in the neighborhood:shifting patterns of economic activities in residential neighborhoods in five dutch cities

Emma Folmer

ABSTRACT: Cities are oftentimes seen as undergoing a process of “emergence” in the “new economy.” However, this process has largely remained empirically underdetermined. This article examines the intra-city geography of emerging businesses in newly dominant sectors of the urban economy. The change in dominant sectors coincides with a shift towards small- and medium-sized businesses, creating new economic opportunities for urban residential areas. The residential neighborhood is introduced as a place where supply and demand side drivers operate to attract or limit such new economic activity. Allen Scott’s perspective of the cognitive-cultural economy is used to analyze which neighborhoods are flourishing sites of the cognitive-cultural sectors. His perspective on industries that are on the rise in urban environments and their growth potential proves very valuable. Social demographic characteristics on the level of the neighborhood are used as predictors of the composition of the local economy. The analyses show that in particular wealthy, gentrified neighborhoods are more prone than others to becoming “hubs” of the cognitive-cultural economy. However, disadvantaged neighborhoods may under certain conditions serve as incubators for business start-ups as they offer low-rent office spaces. This has important consequences for their future economic growth potential as well as the distribution of successful businesses in the city.


Environment and Planning A | 2017

Emerging intra-urban geographies of the cognitive-cultural economy: Evidence from residential neighbourhoods in Dutch cities

Emma Folmer; Robert C. Kloosterman

Most existing research on advanced economic activities focuses on either inner city milieus or suburban industrial parks. We contend, however, that residential neighbourhoods constitute a milieu for economic activities which require the input of high-skilled labour or, to follow Allen Scott, cognitive-cultural activities which are characteristic for contemporary urban economies. Based on a longitudinal data set of company-level data, we show that a significant share of economic activities in urban residential neighbourhoods can indeed be classified as cognitive-cultural and that this share has been growing over the period 1999–2008. We present an analysis of the spatiality of the embeddedness of these activities. In particular, we focus on their traded and untraded interdependencies. For this part of the analysis, we use survey data of 370 businesses based in Dutch residential neighbourhoods. Overall, cognitive-cultural activities maintain many untraded interdependencies on a local level, whereas they maintain most traded interdependencies on a supra-local level. They appear to be making frequent use of both local buzz as well as of supralocal ‘pipelines’, and are thus embedded on various spatial scales. Residential neighbourhoods, then, have to be taken more seriously not just as places of consumption but also as milieus of production for more advanced economic activities.


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2018

Social Change and Social Ventures: Emerging Developments in Social Entrepreneurship

Andreana Drencheva; Jeffery S. McMullen; Emma Folmer; Maija Renko; Sandrine Tunezerwe; Trenton A. Williams; Gary Thomas Burke; Katherine Caldwell; Inna Kozlinska; Sarah Parker Harris; Dean A. Shepherd; Ute Stephan


The National Archives | 2017

Social enterprise: Market trends 2017

Ute Stephan; Paul Braidford; Emma Folmer; Mark Hart; Steve Lomax


SEFORIS | 2017

Context and Social Enterprises: Which Environments Enable Social Entrepreneurship?

Ute Stephan; Emma Folmer


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2017

A model of solidarity and social entrepreneurship

Emma Folmer; Anna Rebmann; Ute Stephan


Archive | 2016

SEFORIS Country Report - Social Enterprises in the United Kingdom

Emma Folmer; Ute Stephan; Marieke Huysentruyt


Archive | 2016

The welfare state and social entrepreneurship:insights from a multi-level study of European regions

Emma Folmer; Anna Rebmann; Ute Stephan


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2016

Bringing the State back in:How Hybrid Organizations Navigate Plurality in Institutional Environments

Emma Folmer; Ute Stephan

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W.G.M. Salet

University of Amsterdam

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Jeffery S. McMullen

Indiana University Bloomington

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Maija Renko

University of Illinois at Chicago

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