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 Call for Papers - Special Issue: Family firms and Regional Context

*Guest Editors*: *Stefano Amato, Evans Korang Adjei, Rodrigo Basco, Lech
Suwala*

Family firms represent one of the most predominant forms of business
organization across regions in developed and emerging economies (Basco et
al. 2021). Family firms are the backbone of some of the most dynamic
regions in the world -like the Baden-Württemberg dominated mainly by the
family-owned Mittelstand (Berghoff 2006) or the Third Italy with the small
and medium-sized family firms scattered in the Marshallian industrial
districts (Becattini et al. 2009)- and important economic players in
natural resource-based clusters in developing and emerging regions – such
as the Antofagasta region in Chile (Basco and Calabrò 2016).

However, current evidence is torn between the association of family firms
with regional long-term economic and prosperity from one side, and the
adverse effects like regional decline, regional sclerosis, and/or regional
lock-ins on the other side (Basco and Suwala 2021; Pittino et al. 2021).
Hence, despite the nascent efforts to elucidate this contradiction and
connect family firms and regional context (Adjei et al. 2018; Albers and
Suwala 2021; Amato et al. 2021a; Ricotta and Basco 2021) are gaining
momentum, family firms have received limited attention in mainstream
regional science.

Following the debate opened by Stough et al. (2015) and continued by Basco
et al. (2021) to advance the cross-fertilization between family business
and regional studies, this call aims to move forward this debate by shading
new light in a twofold and not mutually exclusive way. First, by unveiling
under what conditions family and non-family firms are differently affected
by the regional context where they are located (Capello 2011; Suwala 2021).
The pervasive economic, social, and emotional connections with their home
place (i.e., territorial embeddedness) may enable family firms to exploit
some locational advantages (Cucculelli and Storai 2015; Amato et al. 2021b)
or to offset the downsides resulting from regional remoteness (Baù et al.
2019). Second, by exploring the family firms’ influence on the regional
context (Berlemann and Jahn 2016), that is whether and to what extent the
prevalence of family firms in spatially-bounded areas—such as regions and
territories—fosters (Block and Spiegel 2013; Amato et al. 2021c) or hinders
(Cappelli et al. 2021) local and regional development.

*Review of Regional Research *invites scholars to submit papers for this
special issue on “*Family Firms and Regional Context*” to advance our
understanding of the interplay between family firms and regional settings.
Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

   - The influence of locality on family firm’s decision-making and growth
   pathways
   - Family firms and agglomeration economies
   - Family firms and proximity dimensions
   - Family firms and regional structural change
   - Family firms in Marshallian Industrial Districts (MIDs) and business
   clusters
   - Family firms in rural and peripheral areas
   - Family firms and the spatial evolution of economic activities
   - Family firms and territorial innovation models
   - Family firms and knowledge spillovers theory of entrepreneurship
   - Family firms and location choices
   - Family firms and regional institutions
   - Family firms’ contribution to regional resilience
   - Family firms in regional path creation, path branching/lock-in
   - Family Firms and place-based or mission-oriented policies
   - Family Firms and university-industry cooperation
   - Family Firms and regionalized ‘Big Data’
   - Family firms and regional corporate responsibility
   - The role of family firms in digitalization, smart regions, Industry
   4.0 technologies, and platform-based economies
   - The regional role of family firms during exogenous shocks (e.g.,
   financial crisis, pandemics etc.)


*Instructions and Dates*

Manuscripts should follow the submission guidelines of the journal, which
can be found here:
https://www.springer.com/journal/10037/submission-guidelines. Submissions
should be made through https://www.editorialmanager.com/jfre/default.aspx.

All submissions will go through a blind peer-review process. The deadline
to submit the full paper is September 15, 2022. We expect the special issue
to be published by or before spring 2024.
---

*Rodrigo Basco, Ph.D.*
Professor & Sheikh Saoud bin Khalid bin Khalid Al-Qassimi Chair in Family
Business at American University of Sharjah
Chairman at STEP Project Global Consortium <https://thestepproject.org/>
Associate Editor at Journal of Family Business Strategy
<https://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-family-business-strategy>

Open access to the latest Book Edition: "Family Business and Regional
Development"
<https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/family-business-regional-development-rodrigo-basco-roger-stough-lech-suwala/e/10.4324/9780429058097>

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