id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_uclz7ulk45dqtgn3p5guu7svae Ivan Light Boundaries of Social Capital in Entrepreneurship 2013.0 22 .pdf application/pdf 11196 891 51 The contribution of social capital to entrepreneurship, understood broadly as self-employment in commercial business, is "the social contexts in which cultural capital supports entrepreneurship, thus concealing the Under these circumstances, common in the world of indigenous minorities,3 social capital does not produce entrepreneurship, which suggests that If entrepreneurship depended only on bonding social capital, indigenous Americans and Canadians would be supremely entrepreneurial. Alaskans abundantly endowed with social capital, and we found Alaska Natives traditionally self-employed in fishing, while commercial entrepreneurship in Old Harbor was Social conditions slowed assimilation (see Befu, 1970), and therewith the transmission of the cultural capital of entrepreneurship, and the formation of bridging relationships between the Euro-American and the Alutiiq people. Alutiiq people used their abundant social capital to catch fish and shoot game, an economic activity all right, but they did not focus on commercial entrepreneurship. ./cache/work_uclz7ulk45dqtgn3p5guu7svae.pdf ./txt/work_uclz7ulk45dqtgn3p5guu7svae.txt