Article CC BY 4.0
refereed
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What drives solo and team startups at European universities? The interactive role of entrepreneurial climate, gender, and entrepreneurship course participation

GND
141834935
ORCID
0000-0002-4693-3231
Affiliation
University of St.Gallen, Swiss Institute of Small Business and Entrepreneurship, St.Gallen, Switzerland
Bergmann, Heiko;
GND
141223790
ORCID
0000-0002-5202-830X
Affiliation
Johann Heinrich von Thünen-Institute, Institute of Rural Economics, Braunschweig, Germany
Hundt, Christian;
GND
1018103120
ORCID
0000-0002-0853-7166
Affiliation
Amsterdam Business School, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Obschonka, Martin;
GND
170128598
ORCID
0000-0002-7649-0419
Affiliation
Leibniz University Hannover, Institute of Economic and Cultural Geography, Hannover, Germany
Sternberg, Rolf

Student entrepreneurship can take the form of solo or team efforts. While a positive and supportive university context is likely to increase entrepreneurial activities in general, it is unclear whether this effect is equally strong on both forms of entrepreneurship and for all types of students. Focusing on students embedded in universities, we study the entrepreneurial climate of universities and its combined effects with gender and entrepreneurship education on solo and team entrepreneurship. Drawing from organizational theory and team formation literature, we hypothesize that a positive entrepreneurial climate stimulates both, solo and team entrepreneurship. Yet, we argue that this effect is contingent on individuals’ intrinsic preferences for independence or growth which may differ by gender and entrepreneurship course participation. We test our hypotheses by means of a multilevel and longitudinal research design, using a large international dataset on student entrepreneurs (GUESSS). We find that a positive entrepreneurial climate indeed fosters solo and team startups of students, with gender and entrepreneurship education having an interactive effect. Our results suggest that a positive climate leads to more solo startups of women and more team startups of men. We contribute to a better understanding of student entrepreneurship and, specifically, the formation of solo and team startups. Our results elucidate the hitherto overlooked person-context dynamics and help explain why a supportive university context can unintentionally widen the gender gap in team startups.

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