Table of Contents
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- PREFACE: Latino Entrepreneurs: Challenges and Opportunities, by
Paul Oyer
- PART I: An Introduction to Latino Entrepreneurship— Historical
Perspectives and Data Sources
- CHAPTER 1: Introduction: Advancing U.S. Latino
Entrepreneurship, by Marlene Orozco, Alfonso Morales, Michael J.
Pisani, and Jerry I. Porras
- CHAPTER 2: Entrepreneurs from the Beginning: Latino Business
and
- Commerce since the Sixteenth Century, by Geraldo L. Cadava
- CHAPTER 3: Latino Business and Commerce: A Contemporary View,
by Michael J. Pisani and Iliana Perez
- CHAPTER 4: The Economic Contributions of Latino Entrepreneurs,
by Robert W. Fairlie, Zulema Valdez, and Jody Agius Vallejo
- CHAPTER 5: The State of Latino Entrepreneurship: SLEI Research
and Findings, by Marlene Orozco and Iliana Perez
- PART II: Macro Perspectives: A Regional Approach
- CHAPTER 6: Latino Farm Entrepreneurship in Rural America, by
Barbara Robles, Alfonso Morales, and Michael J. Pisani
- CHAPTER 7: Shaping Success: Exploring the Evolution of Latino
Businesses in Three Major U.S. Counties, by Edna Ledesma and
Cristina Cruz
- CHAPTER 8: Mexican American Founder Narratives at High-Growth
Firms on the South Texas–Mexican Border, by John Sargent and Linda
Matthews
- PART III: Micro Perspectives: Individual and Group-Level
Analysis
- CHAPTER 9: Social Network Utilization among Latino-Owned
Business, by Elsie L. Echeverri-Carroll and Marie T. Mora
- CHAPTER 10: Acculturation and Latino-Owned Business Success:
Patterns and Connections, by Michael J. Pisani and Joseph M.
Guzman
- CHAPTER 11: The Business of Language: Latino Entrepreneurs,
Language Use, and Firm Performance, by Alberto Dávila, Michael J.
Pisani, and Gerardo Miranda
- CHAPTER 12: How Can Entrepreneurship Serve as a Pathway to
Reduce Income Inequality among Hispanic Women?, by Ruth E.
Zambrana, Leticia C. Lara, Bea Stotzer, and Kathleen Stewart
- PART IV: Practice and Policy
- CHAPTER 13: SLEI-Education Scaling Program: A Business Program
of "National Economic Imperative", by Marlene Orozco
- CHAPTER 14: The G.R.E.A.T. Gacela Theory: Increasing Capital
and Conditions for Success for High-Potential Latino Entrepreneurs
Capable of Transforming Our Economy and Our Country, by Monika
Mantilla
- CONCLUSION: A New National Economic Imperative, by Marlene
Orozco, Alfonso Morales, Michael J. Pisani, and Jerry I.
Porras
- ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS
- INDEX
About the Author
Marlene Orozco is the lead research analyst with
the Stanford Latino Entrepreneurship Initiative (SLEI) and a PhD
candidate in sociology. She is trained in both qualitative and
quantitative methods of research and is an Institute of Education
Sciences fellow in quantitative education policy analysis.
Alfonso Morales is the Vilas Distinguished
Achievement Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the
Department of Planning and Landscape Architecture. He is interested
in the relationship among thinking, interaction, and social
organization. He has authored, edited, or coauthored more than one
hundred articles and book chapters and six books.
Michael J. Pisani is a professor of
international business at Central Michigan University. His research
concerns the intersection of international business and
development, with specific interests in entrepreneurship, economic
informality, cross-border business, and economic phenomena. He has
authored or coauthored more than one hundred articles and book
chapters and four books.
Jerry I. Porras is the Lane Professor of
Organizational Behavior, Emeritus, at the Stanford Graduate School
of Business. He cofounded the Latino Business Action Network
(LBAN), a nonprofit focused on promoting the growth of Latino-owned
businesses. Subsequently, the Stanford Latino Entrepreneurship
Initiative (SLEI), a collaboration between the Stanford Graduate
School of Businesses and the LBAN, was created to conduct research
on Latino entrepreneurship and offer educational programs to help
Latino business owners scale their companies to become very large
enterprises. Porras serves as faculty codirector of SLEI.
Reviews
"Every businessperson, political leader, and virtually every
American should either read or obtain summaries of the findings
within Advancing U.S. Latino Entrepreneurship. Included are
insights everyone should have as they focus on job creation in our
economy and where it is driven from, given the nature of the
research, analysis, and perspectives contained within this volume.
We all now need to be driven by a twenty-first-century view of the
drivers of entrepreneurship. This book provides a roadmap for
consideration and investment."