Unlike other research in the field of entrepreneurship where implications from research findings are used to suggest what policy actions should be taken to increase the level of entrepreneurship in an economy, this study is based on what entrepreneurship policy actions are being taken. This is a unique book in the field which points to the way forward both for policymakers and for the research community in terms of thinking about entrepreneurship policy and the complex issues surrounding its development.
Lois Stevenson is a leading authority on entrepreneurship development and its role in government policy. She is a former Director of SME Policy with Industry Canada and former Director, Entrepreneurship Development with the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, one of Canada’s regional development agencies. She is currently an executive in the Policy Sector of Industry Canada and works on issues related to innovation policy. In 2002-03, she played a lead role in the Government of Canada’s Innovation Strategy public engagement process and continues to develop learning venues to transfer know-how in the management of innovation to academic and business audiences, featuring case profiles of innovating Canadian firms and live studio interviews with their CEOs. Prior to beginning work with the Government of Canada in 1990, she spent ten years as a university professor teaching and researching in the areas of entrepreneurship and small business management. She is author of seven books and over 40 articles and papers published in refereed journals and conference proceedings. Her topics have dealt with women entrepreneurs, young entrepreneurs, the role of entrepreneurship in development, and entrepreneurship policy. She has been invited to deliver keynote addresses and workshops in many countries around the world, including Australia, Taiwan, Croatia, Brazil, South Africa, Sweden, Zimbabwe, Norway and the Netherlands. Ms. Stevenson is a member of the International Reference Council of the Swedish Foundation for Small Business Research (FSF) and during 2000-01 was a visiting researcher with the Foundation leading an international study of entrepreneurship policy. She has worked in major corporations such as IBM and the Royal Bank and been involved in two of her own businesses. She is Past-President of the International Council for Small Business (ICSB) (97-98), Past-President of the Canadian Council for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (CCSBE), a member of the Ernst&Young Entrepreneurship Of The Year Institute, a Fellow of the Price-Babson College Fellows Program, a Fellow of the IC2 Institute of the University of Texas at Austin and a Wilford White Fellow.
Anders Lundström is Founder and President of The Swedish Foundation for Small Business Research (FSF), with offices in Orebro and Stockholm, Sweden and Brussels. He is responsible for the FSF research program concerning the Effects of Small Business and Entrepreneurship Policy Programs and has conducted many studies concerning problems and possibilities for SMEs and also a number of studies concerning policy issues. He is also chairing the International Council and Scientific Forum of FSF. The International Council consists of all winners of the FSF-NUTEK Award and expert and researchers from US, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, UK, Denmark and the EU-Commission and the Scientific Forum consists of nearly all associate and full professors in the area of entrepreneurship and small business research in Sweden. Dr. Lundström was Deputy-Director at NUTEK, Sweden’s Business Development Agency, and prior to that, the Research Director at SIND, the Swedish National Industrial Board. He founded and chaired FSF in 1994 and became its President in 1997. He also founded theFSF-NUTEK Award, the International Award for Small Business and Entrepreneurship Research in 1996. Dr. Lundström has written over 20 books and a lot of articles in the field of small business and entrepreneurship. He is a Professor at the Business School of Mälardalens University and Associated Professor at the Gothenburg Business School, where he obtained his PhD in Business.