Russell Matthews
University of Strathclyde
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Russell Matthews.
Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2018
Norin Arshed; Dominic Chalmers; Russell Matthews
Despite efforts to increase the quantity and quality of women-owned businesses, enterprise policy has enjoyed only modest success. This article explores the role of legitimacy in these outcomes by examining how and when individual stakeholders evaluate and then influence the legitimacy of women’s enterprise policy. We draw on 45 interviews with actors in the UK enterprise policy ecosystem and an ethnographic study of the policy process. We present a multilevel model of two opposing legitimacy processes: a legitimacy repair loop and a delegitimizing loop. In doing so, we provide a novel perspective on policy institutionalizing.
International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour & Research | 2017
Lucrezia Casulli; Dominic Chalmers; Sarah Drakopoulou Dodd; Russell Matthews; Stoyan Stoyanov
In September 2016, the esteemed New York University Professor Paul Romer (2016) published an excoriating critique of his own academic discipline, entitled “The Trouble With Macroeconomics”. He identified a “general failure mode of science” in which a scholarly community can stagnate or even regress owing to insularity and the marginalisation of non-mainstream thought. He took specific aim at complex theoretical modelling in econometrics that has become so abstracted as to have untethered from reality. Often, he argues quite scathingly, the resultant “post-real” theory has failed to reflect the broad scope of human motivations or behaviours it proposes to explain. Romer concludes that any field with a reliance on abstract mathematical modelling is prone to such failure, a fact underlined by the Bank of England’s chief economist Andy Haldane who acknowledges that “the economics profession is to some degree in crisis” (Wallace 2017: 1). So, where does this leave the field of entrepreneurship, and what lessons can the research community take from the apparent demise of macroeconomics? Firstly, we conclude that the scholarly field meets Romer’s conditions for being susceptible to ‘failure’ in that it is largely mathematically based, with van Burg and Romme (2014: 372) finding that “most entrepreneurship studies published in leading journals draw on positivism, by emphasizing hypothesis testing, inferential statistics, and internal validity”. Furthermore, there is strong group identification within the discipline, with many entrepreneurship scholars appearing to hold a passionate belief in entrepreneurship as something that should be advocated and propagated in a way other social scientists are simply not inclined to do for their subject.
International Small Business Journal | 2009
Russell Matthews
Journal of Business Venturing | 2018
Russell Matthews; Dominic Chalmers; Simon Scott Fraser
Academy of Management Proceedings | 2018
Russell Matthews; Dominic Chalmers; Norin Arshed; Simon Scott Fraser
Academy of Management Proceedings | 2018
Dominic Chalmers; Russell Matthews; Norin Arshed; Sarah Drakopoulou Dodd; Simon Scott Fraser
The Academy of Management | 2016
Russell Matthews; Dominic Chalmers
Archive | 2016
Niall MacKenzie; Dominic Chalmers; Russell Matthews
Archive | 2015
Patricia Findlay; Dominic Chalmers; Colin Lindsay; Jillian MacBryde; Russell Matthews; Rachelle Pascoe-Deslauriers; James Russell Wilson
Research in Entrepreneurship and Small Business 2013 | 2013
Russell Matthews; Dominic Chalmers; Norin Arshed