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This paper develops a novel Ignatian-based entrepreneurship education model that integrates dark-side theories of entrepreneurship into entrepreneurship teaching to supplement traditional process
The Journal of Jesuit Business Education is the peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal of the Colleagues in Jesuit Business Education (CJBE).
Engage your students with stories of resilience, strength and empowerment as told by direct selling women in Thailand.
This video is a condensed version of a live presentation on diversity, equity, and inclusion given by Mona Ameli, CEO and Managing Partner of Ameli Global Partnerships.
The Joni Rogers-Kante & SeneGence case touches on topics of skyrocketing growth, the operational and leadership shifts that accompany such growth, industry ethics, home-based business, family
The Journal of Jesuit Business Education is the peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal of the Colleagues in Jesuit Business Education (CJBE).
In this paper, we share learnings from a decade-long experiment in developing a bridge course that integrates a theological perspective into business education at a Catholic University.
Tastefully Simple: A New Recipe for Success follows the story of a woman-owned, direct selling organization along its upward trajectory of growth, followed by an 11-year period of declining
No business is immune to the massive changes resulting from COVID-19, but leaders who develop an entrepreneurial mindset - from executives to their independent salesforce - prove agile at adaptin
This course gives students the chance to develop their knowledge and thinking about entrepreneurial opportunities by applying marketing concepts to the specific challenges of the small business,
This is an introductory Entrepreneurship course for those contemplating an Entrepreneurship major and minor with an opportunity to vie for a business loan to start a businesson campus.
The Economy of Communion (EoC) is a worldwide entrepreneurial movement which sees the person, rather than profit, as the most important focus of business.
The Connie Tang & Princess House case touches on topics of crisis management, community, the direct selling business model, the Hispanic market, leadership, childhood and adult influences and
Two homeschooled Florida teenagers meet in a homeschool group arranged by their moms, start community college at 14 years of age and discover a shared passion for social entrepreneurship.
Marketing education in Jesuit business schools, as in most other business schools, is mainly oriented towards traditional for-profit business enterprises.
This research provides a first step in developing an inventory on entrepre- neurship curriculum, pedagogy, and research within the global network of Jesuit universities.