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*Call for papers: “Contextualizing Family Firms in the Arab World”*

*(28th February 2018)*







 Family firms in the Arab World cannot be fully understood without
considering the context in which families and firms exist. While contexts
determine organizational behavior (Johns, 2006), the footprints of family
firms recursively manifest themselves in regional socio-economic contexts
(Basco, 2015). Therefore, to fully understand the Arab family firm
phenomenon, scholars must go beyond its boundaries by recognizing and
exploring the multiple embeddedness of family firms in general. We must
consider the micro-context of the family, the meso-context of the industry,
and the macro-context of the country/region, all of which are characterized
by paradoxes of conflict and peace, stability and instability, certainty
and uncertainty, and modernity and tradition (Basco, 2017).

In the Arab World, socio-economic activities have traditionally been
embedded in kinship relationships in Bedouin, rural, and urban societies.
Families are the dominant institutions through which individuals transmit
their culture, legacy, religion, expectations, and traditions and interact
in society (Barakat, 1993) by creating their own identity. In this context,
Arab families act as a filter absorbing changes caused by contemporary
economies, social and economic globalization forces, societal conflicts,
political transformations, the influence of the recent colonial past, and
cultural pressures from Western and Eastern cultures.

Even though the family business field has gained external legitimacy
(Chrisman, Chua, & Steier, 2003; Perez Rodriguez & Basco, 2011), the lack
of an overall family business theory is mainly due to the shortage of
studies integrating contextual dimensions. A theory of family firms “must
explain and predict not only the interaction between family and business
systems at the individual and family firm levels but also the interaction
between family firms and the environment at the aggregate level” (Basco,
2015, p. 260). In this sense, contextualizing the family firm in the Arab
World could help clarify firm familiness (Gomez-Mejia, Cruz, Berrone, & De
Castro, 2011; Habbershon & Williams, 1999), which focuses on the effect
family has on firm behavior and performance, and regional familiness
(Stough, Welter, Block, Wennberg, & Basco, 2015), which focuses on the
family firm’s effect on regional development.

The aim of this conference is to advance previous efforts to contextualize
the family firm phenomenon in different institutional and cultural
environments (e.g., Gupta, Levenburg, Moore, Motwani, & Schwarz, 2008),
particularly in the Arab World (e.g., Bizri, 2016; Fahed-Sreih &
Djoundourian, 2006; Welsh & Raven, 2006).

We invite submissions to the conference titled “Conceptualizing Family
Firms in the Arab World.” The purpose of the conference is to gather
researchers who are investigating the family firm phenomenon in the Arab
World. We expect that contextualizing family firms in the Arab World will
shed new light on the nuances of family firms in terms of their
phenomenological perspectives and theoretical development.



*Submission Guidelines and deadline*

We encourage scholars, especially PhD students and young researchers, whose
research focuses directly or indirectly on family businesses in the Arab
World to submit their works in progress at different stages. Abstract
submission should be one document with a cover page (title, author’s name,
affiliation, email) and a two-page abstract (topic of research, theories,
method, results, contributions)



Abstract submission should be sent electronically to [log in to unmask]
Deadline Abstract by 30/11/2017 - Authors Notification by 31/12/2017 -
Final papers (final submission) by 31/01/2018



*Conference Highlights *

*Travel Research Grants*

The Sheikh Saoud bin Khalid bin Khalid Al-Qassimi Chair in Family Business
offers six scholarships for PhD students from the Arab World to travel to
and attend the conference. Potential candidates who would like to apply for
a travel/accommodation grant should send their application letter and CV
with their abstract submission by 30/11/2017.

*Career Academy*

We have designed a special event for PhD students and young scholars called
the Career Academy Workshop to discuss the challenges of developing an
academic career in the Arab World. Topics will include matters related to
earning a PhD, building an academic career, publishing research, and
building local and international networks.

*Special Topic Section*

In collaboration with *Journal Family Business Strategy*, papers presented
at the conference will be eligible for a special topic section,
“Contextualizing Family Firms in the Arab World.”

*Registration *

There is no registration fee.

*Program *

27 of February, 2018 Welcome reception, 7pm-10pm, Sharjah

*Academic Conference: *28 of February, 2018 - Keynote speakers - Plenary
sessions

*Business Family Conference: *1 of March, 2018 - Keynote speakers and panel
sessions

*Venue. *American University of Sharjah, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates



*Organizers: Rodrigo Basco* (American University of Sharjah), *Alreem Al
Ammari* (American University of Sharjah), and *Farida El Agamy* (Tharawat
Family Business Forum)









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*References*

Barakat, H. (1993). *The Arab World. Society, culture, and state*.
Berkeley, California: University of California Press.

Basco, R. (2015). Family business and regional development-A theoretical
model of regional familiness. *Journal of Family Business Strategy*, *6*(4),
259–271.

Basco, R. (2017). The multiple embeddedness of family firms in Arab World.
In S. Basly, P.-L. Saunier, & A. Marouane (Eds.), *Family Businesses in the
Arab World - Governance, Strategy, and Financing* (p. forthcoming).

Bizri, R. (2016). Succession in the family business: drivers and
pathways. *International
Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research*, *22*(1), 133–154.

Chrisman, J. J., Chua, J. H., & Steier, L. P. (2003). An introduction to
theories of family business. *Journal of Business Venturing*, *18*(4),
441–448.

Fahed-Sreih, J., & Djoundourian, S. (2006). Determinants of longevity and
success in Lebanese family businesses: An exploratory study. *Family
Business Review*, *19*(3), 225–234.

Gomez-Mejia, L. R., Cruz, C., Berrone, P., & De Castro, J. (2011). The Bind
that Ties: Socioemotional Wealth Preservation in Family Firms. *Academy of
Management Annals*, *5*(1), 653–707.

Gupta, V., Levenburg, N., Moore, L., Motwani, J., & Schwarz, T. V.
(2008). *Culturally-sensitive
models of family business in Germanic Europe.* Hyderabad, India: ICFA
University Press.

Habbershon, T. G., & Williams, M. L. (1999). A Resource-Based Framework for
Assessing the Strategic Advantages of Family Firms. *Family Business Review*,
*12*(1), 1–25.

Johns, G. (2006). The Essential Impact of Context on Organizational
Behavior. *Academy of Management Review*, *31*(2), 386–408.

Perez Rodriguez, M. J., & Basco, R. (2011). The cognitive legitimacy of the
family business field. *Family Business Review*, *24*(4).

Stough, R., Welter, F., Block, J., Wennberg, K., & Basco, R. (2015). Family
business and regional science: “Bridging the gap.” *Journal of Family
Business Strategy*, *6*(4), 208–218.

Welsh, D. H. B., & Raven, P. (2006). Family business in the Middle East: An
exploratory study of retail management in Kuwait and Lebanon. *Family
Business Review*, *19*(1), 29–48.



*Rodrigo Basco, Ph.D.*
Associate Professor
Sheikh Saoud bin Khalid bin Khalid Al-Qassimi Chair in Family Business
American University of Sharjah

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