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Journal of Entrepreneurship & Public Policy创刊信息
来源: 发布日期:2010/09/11 点击量:

学术信息

Journal of Entrepreneurship & Public Policy创刊信息

发表于: 2010-09-11 05:33  点击:1449

 Title:

 
Editor:
Noel D. Campbell (University of Central Arkansas)
 
Journal Specification:
§        Proposed launch date: 2012
§        No. of issues per year: Two
§        No. of papers per year: Min. of five per issue; 10 per year, initially
§        Non-article content: Book review section
§        Review process: Double Blind
 
 
EDITORIAL TEAM
 
 
Editor:
Noel D. Campbell, Ph.D., George Mason University, 1997 (economics)
University of Central Arkansas
Book review editor:
Josh Hall, Ph.D., West Virginia University, 2007 (economics)
Beloit College
Editorial Board:
Nabamita Dutta (University of Wisconsin- La Crosse) South Asia Regional Editor
Gift Dafuleya (University of Venda) Africa Regional Co-editor
Tendayi Gondo (University of Venda) Africa Regional Co-editor
Zheng Li (Economics School of Jilin University) Southeast Asia Regional Editor
Tomi Ovaska (Youngstown State University) Europe/Post-Socialist Economies Regional Editor
 
Editorial operations:
The proposed journal will adopt the online system, ScholarOne manuscript central, which will help me manage the submission and reviewing system. While the site is being built, submissions will be received by email.
 
 
EDITORIAL INFORMATION
 
 
Editorial objectives and coverage:
Institutions—especially public policies—are a significant determinant of economic outcomes; entrepreneurship and enterprise development are often the channel by which public policies affect economic outcomes, and by which outcomes feed back to the policy process. The Journal of Entrepreneurship & Public Policy (JEPP) was created to encourage and disseminate quality research about these vital relationships. The ultimate aim is to improve the quality of the political discourse about entrepreneurship and development policies. JEPP is empirically oriented, and empirical papers are strongly encouraged. However, JEPP accepts a wide variety of empirical evidence, such as statistical analyses, case or historical studies, and survey, experimental, or computational methods. Although empirical papers are encouraged, JEPP will consider conceptual or theoretical papers that indicate a direction for future research, or otherwise advance the field of study. JEPP seeks empirically supported articles that advance understanding of the relationships among public policy and entrepreneurship, entrepreneurship and economic development, or all three areas.
 
Target market:
·        Public policy researchers with special interest in the relationship leading from institutions to enterprise to economic outcomes.
·        Entrepreneurship researchers with special interest in public policy and economic outcomes
·        Policy makers charged with promoting economic development or with promoting entrepreneurship, per se.
 
Key research areas covered in the journal:
Although JEPP welcomes submissions from researchers in any field, for convenience we use JEL Classification System in this document:
H32 - Fiscal Policies and Behavior of Economic Agents; Firms
H73 - Interjurisdictional Differentials and Their Effects
L26 – Entrepreneurship
L38 - Public Policy
M13 - New Firms; Startups
O12 - Microeconomic Analyses of Economic Development
O2 - Development Planning and Policy
O31 - Innovation and Invention: Processes and Incentives
R11 - Regional Economic Activity: Growth, Development, and Changes
R58 - Regional Development Policy
 
Prospective topics:
International studies of public corruption’s effects on business venturing
 
Sub-national analysis of tax, expenditure, and regulation studies in nations other than the U.S. with a federal government system.
 
The impact of explicit policies to promote entrepreneurship on the relative mixture “mice,” “gazelles,” and “elephants” in new ventures
 
The employment effects of different policies designed to promote entrepreneurship
 
The effects on start-up firms’ profits under different policies designed to promote entrepreneurship
 
The effect of Federal regulations on entrepreneurial outcomes (net number of new firms, net number of new patents, net number of new jobs, profitability, etc.) relative to the effects of state regulatory policy
 
The effect of national or sub-national “green” policies on entrepreneurial outcomes (net number of new firms, net number of new patents, net number of new jobs, profitability, etc.)
 
The sensitivity of entrepreneurial outcomes to changes in national or sub-national unfunded mandates
 

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