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The study of entrepreneurial intention sheds new light on the complex dynamics of entrepreneurial behavior. This research contributes to the academic debate by examining the gap in studies on entrepreneurial intention in Latin America, considering the importance of gender differences and their effects on entrepreneurial intention. Thus, this study is a contribution to research on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) related to social equity, in the areas of quality education (SDG 4), gender equality (SDG 5), and inequalities reduction (SDG 10). To study gender entrepreneurial intention phenomena differences, researchers have taken refuge in the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) and focused their analysis on a group of economics and business students from a coastal campus of a Chilean University. In a two-step methodological process, the authors verified the applicability of the entrepreneurial intention questionnaire (CIE) with the selected sample and then calculated entrepreneurial intention using the CIE instrument. Contrary to general literature results, the study shows that there are no significant gender differences in entrepreneurial intention levels. Furthermore, there is neither evidence for gender differences in any of the three entrepreneurial intention factors, i.e., (a) attitudes, (b) subjective norms, and (c) control of perceived behavior.
Nicolás Contreras-Barraza; Juan Espinosa-Cristia; Guido Salazar-Sepulveda; Alejandro Vega-Muñoz. Entrepreneurial Intention: A Gender Study in Business and Economics Students from Chile. Sustainability 2021, 13, 4693 .
AMA StyleNicolás Contreras-Barraza, Juan Espinosa-Cristia, Guido Salazar-Sepulveda, Alejandro Vega-Muñoz. Entrepreneurial Intention: A Gender Study in Business and Economics Students from Chile. Sustainability. 2021; 13 (9):4693.
Chicago/Turabian StyleNicolás Contreras-Barraza; Juan Espinosa-Cristia; Guido Salazar-Sepulveda; Alejandro Vega-Muñoz. 2021. "Entrepreneurial Intention: A Gender Study in Business and Economics Students from Chile." Sustainability 13, no. 9: 4693.
Oceans, seas, and marine resources are highly relevant for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Such relevance has given rise to the blue economy approach, where scholars and policymakers see activities carried out in cargo ports from a different perspective. The blue economy approach stresses the emergence of multiple transnational networks in relation to these topics and the development of green ports plus environmental measurements at seaports in general. In this context, our study aimed to review the various scientifically documented methods for measuring environmental performance in ports, ports companies, or port authorities in the maritime transport and inland waterways framework. The study followed a scientometric meta-analytic methodology to accomplish its goals. The study strictly referred to the Environmental Performance in Ports (EPP) and extracted the corpus to analyze data held in five databases embedded in the Web of Science Core Collection. Then, the selection was processed and refined with the PRISMA guidelines to establish the eligibility criteria for articles with the PICOS (Population, Interventions, Comparators, Outcomes, and Study) tool. A limited study set was identified. This included port environmental performance indicators and studies that were strongly influenced by the European Sea Ports Organization and Green Marine networks. These were compared based on the ecological Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), scale structure, and diversity in application. Finally, we assessed two measurement forms documented in the scientific research on the subject at a global level and discussed their pros and cons.
Alejandro Vega-Muñoz; Guido Salazar-Sepulveda; Juan Espinosa-Cristia; Jonathan Sanhueza-Vergara. How to Measure Environmental Performance in Ports. Sustainability 2021, 13, 4035 .
AMA StyleAlejandro Vega-Muñoz, Guido Salazar-Sepulveda, Juan Espinosa-Cristia, Jonathan Sanhueza-Vergara. How to Measure Environmental Performance in Ports. Sustainability. 2021; 13 (7):4035.
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlejandro Vega-Muñoz; Guido Salazar-Sepulveda; Juan Espinosa-Cristia; Jonathan Sanhueza-Vergara. 2021. "How to Measure Environmental Performance in Ports." Sustainability 13, no. 7: 4035.
This article presents a scientometric study regarding entrepreneurship and its relationship with wellbeing. The study presents a systematic review and measures impact and relational character to identify the relevance of countries, research organizations, and authors in the field of entrepreneurial wellbeing. The study poses the following research questions: What is the nature of the evolution of scientific knowledge in the entrepreneurial wellbeing field? What is the nature of the concentration in terms of geographical distribution and co-authorship level of knowledge production in the entrepreneurial wellbeing field? What are the knowledge trends in knowledge production for entrepreneurial wellbeing literature? The contribution of this research is two-fold. First, in terms of methodology, it contributes study into the use of a more robust approach to search for the scientometric trends about entrepreneurship wellbeing in addition to the PRISMA review tools and the PICOS eligibility criteria. Secondly, the study presents research updates in the search for results for the last 2 years of knowledge production. This upgrade is particularly important in a research field that presents exponential growth, where 2019 and 2020 presented almost double the amount of knowledge production compared to 2017 and 2018.
Nicolás Contreras-Barraza; Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; Guido Salazar-Sepulveda; Alejandro Vega-Muñoz; Antonio Ariza-Montes. A Scientometric Systematic Review of Entrepreneurial Wellbeing Knowledge Production. Frontiers in Psychology 2021, 12, 1 .
AMA StyleNicolás Contreras-Barraza, Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia, Guido Salazar-Sepulveda, Alejandro Vega-Muñoz, Antonio Ariza-Montes. A Scientometric Systematic Review of Entrepreneurial Wellbeing Knowledge Production. Frontiers in Psychology. 2021; 12 ():1.
Chicago/Turabian StyleNicolás Contreras-Barraza; Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; Guido Salazar-Sepulveda; Alejandro Vega-Muñoz; Antonio Ariza-Montes. 2021. "A Scientometric Systematic Review of Entrepreneurial Wellbeing Knowledge Production." Frontiers in Psychology 12, no. : 1.
Scholars had been documenting the Brain Drain phenomenon producing scientific literature for more than 50 years. After three decades of slow but steady progress, literature about this concept has accelerated its progress and growth path, in line with the 9th sustainable development goal “Build resilient infrastructure, promote sustainable industrialization and foster innovation” Thus, the present article aims to define the current theoretical trends about the analysis of advanced intellectual human capital’s international migratory phenomenon. This study uses a scientometric methodology on a corpus of 1212 articles indexed to the JCR-WoS from Social Sciences. The period covered in the study is from 1965 to 2020. The paper looks to understand how researchers studied the brain drain concept over the last 55 years in various disciplines. The report covers 99 categories from the Journal Citation Report (JCR) index. Results show that there is a scientific research critical mass that is studying the brain drain phenomenon. The analysis shows thematic trends at the sources, discourses, and consolidates classic works and some novel authors. Those new scholars and theoretical trends lead to refocused analysis beyond countries with a high development level. Such movement constitutes a new challenge in this line of research toward studying the effects of the brain drain in the peripheral areas of knowledge production.
Alejandro Vega-Muñoz; Paloma Gónzalez-Gómez-Del-Miño; Juan Espinosa-Cristia. Recognizing New Trends in Brain Drain Studies in the Framework of Global Sustainability. Sustainability 2021, 13, 3195 .
AMA StyleAlejandro Vega-Muñoz, Paloma Gónzalez-Gómez-Del-Miño, Juan Espinosa-Cristia. Recognizing New Trends in Brain Drain Studies in the Framework of Global Sustainability. Sustainability. 2021; 13 (6):3195.
Chicago/Turabian StyleAlejandro Vega-Muñoz; Paloma Gónzalez-Gómez-Del-Miño; Juan Espinosa-Cristia. 2021. "Recognizing New Trends in Brain Drain Studies in the Framework of Global Sustainability." Sustainability 13, no. 6: 3195.
Theory-free characterizations of experimental systems miss normative and conceptual components that sometimes are crucial to understanding their historical development. In the following paper, we show that these components may be part of the intrinsic capacities of experimental systems themselves. We study a case of non-exploratory and theory-oriented research in experimental neuroscience that concerns the construction of free-viewing as an experimental system to test one particular pre-existing hypothesis, the Temporal Correlation Hypothesis (TCH), at a laboratory in Santiago de Chile, during 2002–2008. We show that the system does not take well-formulated pre-existing predictions or hypotheses to test them directly, but re-creates them and re-signifies them in terms that are not implied by the theoretical background from which they originally derived. Therefore, we conclude that there is a sui generis way in which experimental systems produce proper theoretical knowledge.
Juan Manuel Garrido Wainer; Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; Natalia Hirmas; Nicolás Trujillo. Free-viewing as experimental system to test the Temporal Correlation Hypothesis: A case of theory-generative experimental practice. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 2020, 83, 101307 .
AMA StyleJuan Manuel Garrido Wainer, Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia, Natalia Hirmas, Nicolás Trujillo. Free-viewing as experimental system to test the Temporal Correlation Hypothesis: A case of theory-generative experimental practice. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences. 2020; 83 ():101307.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Manuel Garrido Wainer; Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; Natalia Hirmas; Nicolás Trujillo. 2020. "Free-viewing as experimental system to test the Temporal Correlation Hypothesis: A case of theory-generative experimental practice." Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 83, no. : 101307.
Studies show that the state plays a positive role in shaping conditions for entrepreneurship and promoting economic growth through entrepreneurial activity. However, the question of how state intervention in entrepreneurship is justified in neoliberal regimes has received scant attention, although it can legitimize public policies. We examine the entrepreneurial slant of the Production and Commerce Development Corporation of Chile (CORFO), which implements regulations and grants financial support to startups. Analyzing interviews with CORFO’s state officials, public statements, and official documentation, we review the advent of state-led entrepreneurial policy and explore the post-dictatorial government’s principles justifying current state policy. This policy relies on double de-politicization: i) divesting entrepreneurship from political affiliation and ii) propagating a meritocratic rhetoric of social and individual development, oblivious of structural inequalities. We argue that this is functional for this regime as long as it guarantees state intervention in entrepreneurship as a policy of common good.
Oriana Bernasconi; Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia. NO POLITICS, NO SOCIETY: QUESTIONING THE JUSTIFICATION OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN CHILEAN PUBLIC POLICIES. Revista de Administração de Empresas 2020, 60, 131 -143.
AMA StyleOriana Bernasconi, Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia. NO POLITICS, NO SOCIETY: QUESTIONING THE JUSTIFICATION OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN CHILEAN PUBLIC POLICIES. Revista de Administração de Empresas. 2020; 60 (2):131-143.
Chicago/Turabian StyleOriana Bernasconi; Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia. 2020. "NO POLITICS, NO SOCIETY: QUESTIONING THE JUSTIFICATION OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN CHILEAN PUBLIC POLICIES." Revista de Administração de Empresas 60, no. 2: 131-143.
La presente investigación se encuadra dentro de los estudios de las finanzas domésticas y tecnologías de lo cotidiano. La CajaVecina, es un sistema del BancoEstado que opera en Chile, que acerca las operaciones bancarias a grupos de personas recientemente bancarizadas, y que reciben servicios financieros en diversos puntos de venta. Por tanto, el objetivo del presente artículo consiste en analizar la confianza y redistribución de agencia en ecosistema de pagos de CajaVecina en Chile. Utilizando una metodología cualitativa con base en entrevistas estructuradas a gerentes, intermediarios y comerciantes, se constata que el fenómeno de la redistribución de la agencia del banco y de la llamada corresponsalía bancaria se basa fundamentalmente en los llamados cupos de operación, desde los cuales el BancoEstado diversifica el riesgo y aprende de las conductas bancarias de los almacenes. Esta información permite que un almacén del barrio se transforme en otro tipo de solución, independiente al banco, aprovechando los niveles de confianza tejidos con sus clientes. En conclusión, es así como este sistema de pagos y operaciones financieras, viene a redistribuirse, asumiendo el intermediario/corresponsal un dominio sobre el territorio y las operaciones, reformulando por completo el llamado ‘espacio de pagos’ para el banco, usuarios, e intermediarios.
Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; Bernardo Batiz-Lazo; José Alarcón-Molina. Confianza y redistribución de agencia en ecosistema de pagos de CajaVecina en Chile. Revista de Ciencias Sociales 2020, 26, 273 -285.
AMA StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia, Bernardo Batiz-Lazo, José Alarcón-Molina. Confianza y redistribución de agencia en ecosistema de pagos de CajaVecina en Chile. Revista de Ciencias Sociales. 2020; 26 (2):273-285.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; Bernardo Batiz-Lazo; José Alarcón-Molina. 2020. "Confianza y redistribución de agencia en ecosistema de pagos de CajaVecina en Chile." Revista de Ciencias Sociales 26, no. 2: 273-285.
The current model of corporate governance needs reform. There is mounting evidence that the practices of shareholder primacy drive company directors and executives to adopt the same short time horizon as financial markets. Pressure to meet the demands of the financial markets drives stock buybacks, excessive dividends and a failure to invest in productive capabilities. The result is a ‘tragedy of the horizon’, with corporations and their shareholders failing to consider environmental, social or even their own, long-term, economic sustainability.With less than a decade left to address the threat of climate change, and with consensus emerging that businesses need to be held accountable for their contribution, it is time to act and reform corporate governance in the EU. The statement puts forward specific recommendations to clarify the obligations of company boards and directors and make corporate governance practice significantly more sustainable and focused on the long term.
Andrew Johnston; Jeroen Veldman; Robert G. Eccles; Simon F. Deakin; Jerry Davis; Marie-Laure Djelic; Katharina Pistor; Blanche Segrestin; Cynthia A. Williams; David K. Millon; Philip Ireland; Beate Sjåfjell; Christopher M. Bruner; Lorraine E. Talbot; Hugh Christopher Willmott; Charlotte Louise Villiers; Carol Liao; Bertrand Valiorgue; Jason Glynos; Todd L. Sayre; Bronwen Morgan; Rick Wartzman; Prem Sikka; Filip Gregor; David Carroll Jacobs; Roger Gill; Roger Brown; Vincenzo Bavoso; Neil Lancastle; Julie Matthaei; Scott Taylor; Ulf Larsson-Olaison; Jay Cullen; Alan J. Dignam; Thomas Wuil Joo; Ciarán O'Kelly; Con Keating; Roman A. Tomasic; Simon Lilley; Kevin Tennent; Keith Robson; Willy Maley; Iris H-Y Chiu; Ewan McGaughey; Chris Rees; Nina Boeger; Adam Leaver; Marc T. Moore; Leen Paape; Alan D. Meyer; Marcello Palazzi; Nitasha Kaul; Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; Timothy Kuhn; David J. Cooper; Susanne Soederberg; Andreas Jansson; Susan Mary Watson; Ofer Sitbon; Joan Loughrey; David J. Collison; Maureen McCulloch; Navajyoti Samanta; Daniel J.H. Greenwood; Grahame F. Thompson; Andrew R. Keay; Alessia Contu; Andreas Rühmkorf; Richard Hull; Irene-Marie Esser; Nihel Chabrak. Corporate Governance for Sustainability. SSRN Electronic Journal 2019, 1 .
AMA StyleAndrew Johnston, Jeroen Veldman, Robert G. Eccles, Simon F. Deakin, Jerry Davis, Marie-Laure Djelic, Katharina Pistor, Blanche Segrestin, Cynthia A. Williams, David K. Millon, Philip Ireland, Beate Sjåfjell, Christopher M. Bruner, Lorraine E. Talbot, Hugh Christopher Willmott, Charlotte Louise Villiers, Carol Liao, Bertrand Valiorgue, Jason Glynos, Todd L. Sayre, Bronwen Morgan, Rick Wartzman, Prem Sikka, Filip Gregor, David Carroll Jacobs, Roger Gill, Roger Brown, Vincenzo Bavoso, Neil Lancastle, Julie Matthaei, Scott Taylor, Ulf Larsson-Olaison, Jay Cullen, Alan J. Dignam, Thomas Wuil Joo, Ciarán O'Kelly, Con Keating, Roman A. Tomasic, Simon Lilley, Kevin Tennent, Keith Robson, Willy Maley, Iris H-Y Chiu, Ewan McGaughey, Chris Rees, Nina Boeger, Adam Leaver, Marc T. Moore, Leen Paape, Alan D. Meyer, Marcello Palazzi, Nitasha Kaul, Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia, Timothy Kuhn, David J. Cooper, Susanne Soederberg, Andreas Jansson, Susan Mary Watson, Ofer Sitbon, Joan Loughrey, David J. Collison, Maureen McCulloch, Navajyoti Samanta, Daniel J.H. Greenwood, Grahame F. Thompson, Andrew R. Keay, Alessia Contu, Andreas Rühmkorf, Richard Hull, Irene-Marie Esser, Nihel Chabrak. Corporate Governance for Sustainability. SSRN Electronic Journal. 2019; ():1.
Chicago/Turabian StyleAndrew Johnston; Jeroen Veldman; Robert G. Eccles; Simon F. Deakin; Jerry Davis; Marie-Laure Djelic; Katharina Pistor; Blanche Segrestin; Cynthia A. Williams; David K. Millon; Philip Ireland; Beate Sjåfjell; Christopher M. Bruner; Lorraine E. Talbot; Hugh Christopher Willmott; Charlotte Louise Villiers; Carol Liao; Bertrand Valiorgue; Jason Glynos; Todd L. Sayre; Bronwen Morgan; Rick Wartzman; Prem Sikka; Filip Gregor; David Carroll Jacobs; Roger Gill; Roger Brown; Vincenzo Bavoso; Neil Lancastle; Julie Matthaei; Scott Taylor; Ulf Larsson-Olaison; Jay Cullen; Alan J. Dignam; Thomas Wuil Joo; Ciarán O'Kelly; Con Keating; Roman A. Tomasic; Simon Lilley; Kevin Tennent; Keith Robson; Willy Maley; Iris H-Y Chiu; Ewan McGaughey; Chris Rees; Nina Boeger; Adam Leaver; Marc T. Moore; Leen Paape; Alan D. Meyer; Marcello Palazzi; Nitasha Kaul; Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; Timothy Kuhn; David J. Cooper; Susanne Soederberg; Andreas Jansson; Susan Mary Watson; Ofer Sitbon; Joan Loughrey; David J. Collison; Maureen McCulloch; Navajyoti Samanta; Daniel J.H. Greenwood; Grahame F. Thompson; Andrew R. Keay; Alessia Contu; Andreas Rühmkorf; Richard Hull; Irene-Marie Esser; Nihel Chabrak. 2019. "Corporate Governance for Sustainability." SSRN Electronic Journal , no. : 1.
Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; Jorge Feregrino; Pablo Isla. Emerging, and old, dilemmas for food security in Latin America. Journal of Public Affairs 2019, 19, e1999 .
AMA StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia, Jorge Feregrino, Pablo Isla. Emerging, and old, dilemmas for food security in Latin America. Journal of Public Affairs. 2019; 19 (3):e1999.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; Jorge Feregrino; Pablo Isla. 2019. "Emerging, and old, dilemmas for food security in Latin America." Journal of Public Affairs 19, no. 3: e1999.
Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; José Ignacio Alarcón. TransBank POS machines and bill receipts: Socio-technical mediations in the normalization of tipping [Máquinas POS de TransBank y boletas: Mediaciones sociotécnicas en la normalización de las propinas]. Psicoperspectivas. Individuo y Sociedad 2019, 18, 1 .
AMA StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia, José Ignacio Alarcón. TransBank POS machines and bill receipts: Socio-technical mediations in the normalization of tipping [Máquinas POS de TransBank y boletas: Mediaciones sociotécnicas en la normalización de las propinas]. Psicoperspectivas. Individuo y Sociedad. 2019; 18 (2):1.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia; José Ignacio Alarcón. 2019. "TransBank POS machines and bill receipts: Socio-technical mediations in the normalization of tipping [Máquinas POS de TransBank y boletas: Mediaciones sociotécnicas en la normalización de las propinas]." Psicoperspectivas. Individuo y Sociedad 18, no. 2: 1.
Resumen El presente trabajo elabora una discusión y reflexión teórica sobre la manera en que la gestión de la innovación puede comprenderse e investigarse. Esta discusión se realiza sobre la base del concepto de gestión de la innovación que han definido Dodgson, Gann y Phillips (2013). El texto analiza, en particular, el impacto de la epistemología y comprensión del mundo que se presentan en la literatura de la gestión de la innovación, utilizando para ello la óptica de un estudio constructivista -Ciencia, Tecnología y Sociedad- y crítico de la misma. El análisis muestra la posibilidad abrir nuevos rumbos para la gestión de la innovación. Como resultado, se muestra la necesidad de comprender performativamente, reflexivamente el fenómeno de la gestión de la innovación, operación que conlleva la necesaria agrupación entre el capital y el trabajo para una comprensión cabal de la gestión de la innovación.
Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia. Gestionando la innovación desde la óptica de los estudios de ciencia, tecnología y sociedad: por una perspectiva constructivista y crítica de la gestión de la innovación. Cadernos EBAPE.BR 2019, 17, 68 -83.
AMA StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia. Gestionando la innovación desde la óptica de los estudios de ciencia, tecnología y sociedad: por una perspectiva constructivista y crítica de la gestión de la innovación. Cadernos EBAPE.BR. 2019; 17 (1):68-83.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia. 2019. "Gestionando la innovación desde la óptica de los estudios de ciencia, tecnología y sociedad: por una perspectiva constructivista y crítica de la gestión de la innovación." Cadernos EBAPE.BR 17, no. 1: 68-83.
El presente artículo describe y analiza un mecanismo de inclusión financiera llamado CajaVecina. Dicho mecanismo ha sido creado por la empresa BancoEstado. El sistema CajaVecina, se inscribe en el fenómeno conocido como la Cashless Society. El tipo de servicio se puede clasificar como una corresponsalía bancaria. La corresponsalía permite a un almacenero el disponer de un terminal POS –point of sale- el que unido a la tarjeta débito de las cuentas vista, permite a los usuarios acceder a variados servicios bancarios y de pagos, en el mismo almacén. El capítulo presenta el sistema, mostrando el éxito de sudifusión y adopción, pero problematizando la relación económica-social que se presenta en las nuevas formas en que se relacionan el usuario, almacenero (intermediario) y el banco. Se utiliza un enfoque basado en la sociología del dinero, de los pagos y los estudios del nuevo institucionalismo como base para el análisis de un corpus de datos obtenido en un sitio web de reclamos de los usuarios del sistema. Se concluye mostrando al mecanismo de CajaVecina como un mecanismo del tipo corresponsalía bancaria que otorga un tipo de inclusión financiera muy distinto al de aquellos que tienen acceso a los servicios del propioBancoEstado, a través de sus oficinas y servicios más tradicionales
José Ignacio Alarcón Molina; Juan Felipe Espinosa Cristia. Bancarización en base al Negocio del Barrio: El Caso CajaVecina. Revista Perfiles Económicos 2018, 1 .
AMA StyleJosé Ignacio Alarcón Molina, Juan Felipe Espinosa Cristia. Bancarización en base al Negocio del Barrio: El Caso CajaVecina. Revista Perfiles Económicos. 2018; (3):1.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJosé Ignacio Alarcón Molina; Juan Felipe Espinosa Cristia. 2018. "Bancarización en base al Negocio del Barrio: El Caso CajaVecina." Revista Perfiles Económicos , no. 3: 1.
The article deals with the problem of the role of ‘social’ devices at the time of producing and reproducing organizational behavior, taking the case of recruitment and selection processes in financial services organizations in Chile and the UK. Based on 42 in-depth interviews in Santiago, London and Edinburgh, and building on science and technology studies and the concept of device the article aims to understand how recruitment and election mechanisms are adopted and legitimated in organizations. Analysis suggests that recruitment and selection mechanisms connect technical and moral elements, allowing managers to deal with uncertainty and carry out organizational reproduction. However, devices in Chile and the UK differ in the modes that connect technical and moral elements.
Juan Felipe Espinosa Cristia; Javier Hernández Aracena. Recruitment and Selection Devices in Financial Services Companies: Exploring the case of Chilean Banking. Cuadernos de Administración 2017, 30, 125 -154.
AMA StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa Cristia, Javier Hernández Aracena. Recruitment and Selection Devices in Financial Services Companies: Exploring the case of Chilean Banking. Cuadernos de Administración. 2017; 30 (54):125-154.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa Cristia; Javier Hernández Aracena. 2017. "Recruitment and Selection Devices in Financial Services Companies: Exploring the case of Chilean Banking." Cuadernos de Administración 30, no. 54: 125-154.
Juan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia. Book Review: Workplace research: conducting small-scale research in organizations. Management Learning 2017, 49, 110 -112.
AMA StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia. Book Review: Workplace research: conducting small-scale research in organizations. Management Learning. 2017; 49 (1):110-112.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa-Cristia. 2017. "Book Review: Workplace research: conducting small-scale research in organizations." Management Learning 49, no. 1: 110-112.
Juan Espinosa. Innovation as a Parasitic Process: Towards Dark Organizational Theory. Knowledge Management: An International Journal 2017, 17, 1 -19.
AMA StyleJuan Espinosa. Innovation as a Parasitic Process: Towards Dark Organizational Theory. Knowledge Management: An International Journal. 2017; 17 (1):1-19.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Espinosa. 2017. "Innovation as a Parasitic Process: Towards Dark Organizational Theory." Knowledge Management: An International Journal 17, no. 1: 1-19.
Juan Felipe Espinosa Cristia; José Ignacio Alarcón Molina. CajaVecina: The Bancarization of Chile Through Corner Shops. The Book of Payments 2016, 141 -151.
AMA StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa Cristia, José Ignacio Alarcón Molina. CajaVecina: The Bancarization of Chile Through Corner Shops. The Book of Payments. 2016; ():141-151.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Felipe Espinosa Cristia; José Ignacio Alarcón Molina. 2016. "CajaVecina: The Bancarization of Chile Through Corner Shops." The Book of Payments , no. : 141-151.
Juan Espinosa. Accepting infernal alternatives: Sustaining venture capital on venture labour * Venture Labor: Work and the Burden of Risk in Innovative Industries by Gina Neff. Science and Public Policy 2012, 40, 560 -561.
AMA StyleJuan Espinosa. Accepting infernal alternatives: Sustaining venture capital on venture labour * Venture Labor: Work and the Burden of Risk in Innovative Industries by Gina Neff. Science and Public Policy. 2012; 40 (4):560-561.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Espinosa. 2012. "Accepting infernal alternatives: Sustaining venture capital on venture labour * Venture Labor: Work and the Burden of Risk in Innovative Industries by Gina Neff." Science and Public Policy 40, no. 4: 560-561.
Juan Espinosa. Book review: Activity theory in practice: Promoting learning across boundaries and agencies Harry Daniels, Anne Edwards, Yrjo Engeström and Tony Gallagher, reviewed by Juan Espinosa. Management Learning 2012, 43, 233 -236.
AMA StyleJuan Espinosa. Book review: Activity theory in practice: Promoting learning across boundaries and agencies Harry Daniels, Anne Edwards, Yrjo Engeström and Tony Gallagher, reviewed by Juan Espinosa. Management Learning. 2012; 43 (2):233-236.
Chicago/Turabian StyleJuan Espinosa. 2012. "Book review: Activity theory in practice: Promoting learning across boundaries and agencies Harry Daniels, Anne Edwards, Yrjo Engeström and Tony Gallagher, reviewed by Juan Espinosa." Management Learning 43, no. 2: 233-236.