Lukas Zaghow
All English-language publications are shown here. You can find all publications, including the German ones herePublications (chronological)
| Year | Title / Citation | Document type | Links / Downloads |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | 2026: Power Relations and Outsider Entrepreneurship: Facets of Marginalisation Tendencies Toward Migrant Entrepreneurs Citation: David, A., Terstriep, J. & Zaghow, L. (2026): Power Relations and Outsider Entrepreneurship: Facets of Marginalisation Tendencies Toward Migrant Entrepreneurs. Journal of Organizational Change Management, 1–28. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOCM-10-2024-0668 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2025 | 2025: Power plays: Surfacing the hidden currents in entrepreneurial ecosystems Citation: Terstriep, J., David, A., Zaghow, L., Vershinia, N. & Freiling, J. (2025): Power plays: Surfacing the hidden currents in entrepreneurial ecosystems. Journal of Business Venturing Insights, 24. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbvi.2025.e00584 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2025 | 2025: Too robust to fail: (international) entrepreneurial resilience as coping mechanisms in crisis for SMEs Citation: Terstriep, J., David, A., Rosenberger, T., & Zaghow, L. (2025): Too robust to fail: (international) entrepreneurial resilience as coping mechanisms in crisis for SMEs. European Journal of International Management, 25 (3/4). https://doi.org/10.1504/EJIM.2024.10065839 | Document type: Journal article | Links / Downloads: |
| 2024 | 2024: What is refugee entrepreneurship? - Reflections for a growing field Citation: David, A. & Zaghow, L.R. (2024): What is refugee entrepreneurship? - Reflections for a growing field (forthcoming). In Ranabahu, N., de Vries, H.P. & Hamilton, R.T. (eds.), Refugee Entrepreneurship - A Research Companion. : Routledge Research Companions in Business and Economics.Within the research field of minority entrepreneurship, the number of publications on refugee entrepreneurship arguing that refugees as businesspeople are distinctive from other minority entrepreneurs, is growing. Using an extensive systematic review of refugee entrepreneurship based on previous work, we suggest that scholars, policymakers, and practitioners adopt more finely grained taxonomies and categories to achieve conceptual and phenomenological clarity in the domain. Doing so could translate into improved support infrastructure and services and ultimately lead to the economic and welfare gains of successful refugee entrepreneurship. | Document type: Article in | Links / Downloads: |