Black entrepreneurship (Lewis et al. 2025) | FT50 JBV

25/11/2025 59 min Temporada 1

Listen "Black entrepreneurship (Lewis et al. 2025) | FT50 JBV"

Episode Synopsis

English Podcast Starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:12:45Hindi Podcast Starts at 00:28:51German Podcast Starts at 00:43:20ReferenceLewis, T., Hunt, R. A., Murphy, M. J., & Townsend, D. M. (2025). Black entrepreneurship: A multilevel process model of constrained agency across the business venturing lifecycle. Journal of Business Venturing, 41(1), 106547. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusvent.2025.106547Youtube Channel⁠https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcher⁠Connect over linkedinhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/mayukhpsm/Welcome to "Revise and Resubmit," your passport to the boldest ideas and breakaway thinkers shaking up research today! 🚀 This is where academia gets animated, and tonight, things get especially electric — because we’re diving into an article that’s not just timely, but absolutely vital for our times.Today’s spotlight is on "Black entrepreneurship: A multilevel process model of constrained agency across the business venturing lifecycle"—a powerhouse piece authored by Trey Lewis, Richard A. Hunt, Maurice J. Murphy, and David M. Townsend. 🎓 This is no ordinary manuscript. It’s published in the Journal of Business Venturing, a prestigious FT50 journal that sets the gold standard for scholarly excellence. Just imagine, the FT50 isn’t just a list — it’s a cathedral of business research, hosting articles that move markets, policies, and conversations around the world.This article unravels the paradox of Black entrepreneurship in America: economic triumphs on one side, stubborn structural constraints on the other. It sings with examples of agency, courage, and the sheer grit it takes to build and grow a venture as a Black entrepreneur, while also confronting the tough reality of racialized barriers that show up at every step. 🔍 The authors go deep, showing how constrained agency runs through the lifecycle of building a business — not just as a theory, but as lived experience.You’ll find revelations here: unique constraints, the exercise of agency in the face of them, and—perhaps best of all—a roadmap for future research that helps practitioners and policymakers alike reimagine entrepreneurship for marginalized communities.Thanks to Trey Lewis, Richard A. Hunt, Maurice J. Murphy, David M. Townsend—your work truly elevates the conversation. Thank you to Elsevier, for championing research that matters and giving these scholarly voices a global platform.Want to keep up with breakthroughs, game-changers, and unforgettable debates? Smash that subscribe button for "Revise and Resubmit" on Spotify. 📱 Hop onto our YouTube channel "Weekend Researcher" for even more academic deep-dives. We’re streaming on Amazon Prime and Apple Podcast too, so you can tune in, learn, and get inspired wherever you roam.Tonight’s question: If agency can thrive even in a landscape shaped by constraints, how might our research, our policies, and our entrepreneurial spirit change when we look at barriers as birthplaces of brilliance instead of boundaries? 🌟 What do you think — where does real change begin?

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