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Notes for a Panel on Entrepreneurship in Business History

Robert D. Cuff

Business History Review, 2002, vol. 76, issue 1, 123-132

Abstract: I want to begin with a question. Why did the historical study of entrepreneurship take such a decidedly “organizational turn” during the 1950s? One might have thought that a Research Center in Entrepreneurial History would have stimulated work on the individual entrepreneur; that it might have encouraged a focus on such questions as exactly why and how individual entrepreneurs created and sustained new businesses.

Date: 2002
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