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Featured researches published by Tobias Schölin.


International Small Business Journal | 2016

Categorising and labelling entrepreneurs: Business support organisations constructing the Other through prefixes of ethnicity and immigrantship

Lena Andersson Högberg; Tobias Schölin; Monder Ram; Trevor Jones

This article demonstrates how Swedish support organisations approach and target immigrant entrepreneurs in terms of categorisation and labelling. In their strategic positioning, and as a result of framing and communicating specific target groups for their activities, organisations simultaneously produce and reproduce categories of clients. We argue that despite its emancipatory intent, the process of categorisation runs the risk of reproducing an inferior Other. Adding prefixes in labelling entrepreneurs may replicate the societal hierarchies that business support initiatives were designed to counteract. This article questions the basis of business support for minority entrepreneurs and is a contribution to wider debates concerned with exposing the constructed nature of entrepreneurship.


International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour & Research | 2016

Self-employment: The significance of families for professional intentions and choice of company type

Tobias Schölin; Per Broomé; Henrik Ohlsson

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the influence that family factors have on an individual’s intention to be self-employed. Design/methodology/approach – The authors selected, from Swedish national registers, all full siblings born between 1945 and 1960 and their biological children, who were born before 1985. The authors created one family database consisting of male individuals (n=1,204,436) and one family database consisting of female individuals (n=1,349,904). The authors defined the outcome variable during the years 2003-2010. Separate analyses were conducted for each of the four outcome variables: all self-employed individuals, owners of limited liability companies, sole traders and hybrids. The authors used multi-level logistic analysis for this study. Findings – The study demonstrates that the influence that family factors have on an individual’s choice of company type is strong; however, it varies depending on intentions transferred within the family. Originality/value – The authors divide self-employment into three distinct parts based on the company type, which enables a sophisticated analysis of self-employed individuals and of the transference of intentions to be self-employed within families. The authors contribute to the understanding of why individuals become self-employed by examining the impact of family factors on the intention of an individual to choose different types of company.


Journal of Education and Training | 2018

The policy influence on the development of entrepreneurship in higher education: A Swedish perspective

Gustav Hägg; Tobias Schölin

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to describe and analyze the foundation of higher education policies that have promoted entrepreneurship in Sweden since the mid-1990s. Design/methodology/approach To do this, the authors use Bacchi’s (1999) “What’s the problem?” approach. A central assumption of which is that perceptions of a problem affect how its solution looks. Bacchi’s approach is described as a type of discourse analysis. Findings The authors show that problem definition within policies regarding the role and importance of entrepreneurship within higher education has explicitly been directed toward equipping individuals to develop action-orientated skills in the field of entrepreneurship. The equipment of action-oriented skills has implicitly been directed to individuals’ personal initiatives to meet explicit social and collective problems, fueling a neoliberal development and fostering an enterprising culture. The authors also show how policy creates a discourse, which may be characterized as “useful, unreflective citizens.” Research limitations/implications The study addresses the implicit steering that is being exercised through policies. This steering needs to be questioned and problematized in order to avoid blindly following the implied course of action. Originality/value The study contributes to current understanding of how entrepreneurship in higher education is both governed explicitly and implicitly, by policy, through the creation of new norms in society.


Entrepreneurship and Regional Development | 2017

The role of regions for different forms of business organizations

Tobias Schölin; Henrik Ohlsson; Per Broomé

Abstract The evidence for associations between area characteristics and entrepreneurship is fairly consistent in most studies. These studies, however, have disregarded the fact that the areas might be constructs that have no effect on the individual differences in entrepreneurship and, furthermore, have conflated entrepreneurship and sole proprietorship, disregarding the impact of area constructs on different forms of business organizations. Therefore, we investigate and quantify, within a multi-level framework, the importance of municipalities and regions for understanding individual differences in entrepreneurship and self employment (defined as sole proprietorship). By using register data comprising the entire Swedish population for 2000–2010, we decompose the variation for the respective form of business organization into three levels: the individual, the municipality and the region. Our results show that about 10% of the total variation in entrepreneurship can be attributed to the municipality and region level. The corresponding numbers for self employment are 3–4%. Our results indicate that regions and municipalities differ markedly in area impact for entrepreneurs compared to self employed. The results from the present study show the importance of taking into account the form of business organization in economic analysis, and they can be used when considering whether it is appropriate to focus on specific municipalities and regions for policy interventions on self-employment.


Archive | 2006

Migration och professioner i förändring

Carin Björngren Cuadra; Linda Lill; Tobias Schölin; Caroline Ljungberg; Sophie Hydén


Archive | 2010

Företagare i Skåne - kartläggning och analys av inrikes och utrikes födda företagare

Tobias Schölin; Per Broomé; Inge Dahlstedt; Pieter Bevelander


Current themes in Imer research; 6 (2007) | 2007

Quantitative Indicators of Diversity: Content or Packaging?

Per Broomé; Inge Dahlstedt; Tobias Schölin


Archive | 2006

Chefsrekrytering i Malmö stad. En fallstudie om kompetens, mångfald och homogenisering

Per Broomé; Caroline Ljungberg; Tobias Schölin


Archive | 2016

Invandring och företagande : Kunskapsöversikt 2016:7

Martin Klinthäll; Craig Mitchell; Tobias Schölin; Zoran Slavnic; Susanne Urban


Nordic Conference on Small Business Research 2014, Nordic Conference on Small Businesses (NCSB) Research 14-16 May, Norge, Bodö. | 2014

Education and new openings for immigrant entrepreneurship in the health care sector in Sweden

Susanne Urban; Tobias Schölin; Monder Ram; Trevor Jones

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Monder Ram

University of Leicester

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Trevor Jones

Liverpool John Moores University

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