Publication by Brett R. Smith, Jeffery S. McMullen, and Melissa S. Cardon
Highlights
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Religion has been neglected but holds great promise as an alternative and complementary perspective to the economic approach for research in our field.
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A ‘theological turn’ in entrepreneurship research is based on religion’s prevalence, centrality, established base of scientific inquiry, and ability to provide novel answers to emerging phenomenon.
- We chart a new path for transformative entrepreneurship research that integrates religion into entrepreneurial processes and contexts.
Abstract
Despite its overwhelming importance to millions of people across the planet both currently and throughout history, religion has been largely neglected by entrepreneurship research. Yet, because of its prevalence, centrality, established base of scientific inquiry, and ability to offer novel insight into emerging phenomena, religion offers numerous opportunities for transformative research. In this editorial, we offer a glimpse of what a “theological turn” in entrepreneurship research might look like: first, by identifying obstacles to religion’s inclusion and how these barriers may be overcome; second, by explaining how the theological turn enables alternative explanations of important phenomena and stimulates research questions that build on the growing integration of religion and entrepreneurship in practice; and finally, by showing how a theological turn could challenge researchers to reach beyond our existing knowledge horizons to develop a future of impactful, relevant, and pioneering scholarship in the field of entrepreneurship.

