Christina Theodoraki is Associate professor in Entrepreneurship & Strategy at TBS Education. She is Editor of Small Business Economics, Associate editor of the Journal of Small Business Management and member of the editorial boards of Entrepreneurship Research Journal and Journal of the Knowledge Economy. She is also Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Development Strategies at the University of Indiana, Business Development Manager at the Entrepreneurial Ecosystem Research Network (EERN), leader of the Babson Collaborative research group on entrepreneurial ecosystems and co-supervisor of 3 PhD/DBA theses.
Christina’s teaching areas are Management, Strategy, Business Plan and Entrepreneurial Support. She coordinates the Business Specialization Course on Entrepreneurship. Her areas of research include entrepreneurial ecosystem, entrepreneurial support, and inter-organizational strategies with a focus on business incubators. Her work has been presented at Anglo-Saxon conferences such as: AOM, R&D Management, SMS, RENT, EURAM, ICSB, etc.
Her work is published in Small Business Economics, European Management Review, Journal of Business Research, R&D Management, IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management, M@n@gement, The Journal of Technology Transfer, International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Small Business, Revue international PME, the ICSB Gazette etc.
She received the Babson Collaborative Member of the Year 2021 Award; 2 Best webinar and Best Article Resiliency Awards and a Best Policy Paper Award from the ICSB – International Council for Small Business.
Related posts
Exogenous linkages of and between entrepreneurial ecosystems
Restricting freedom of movement presents long-term risks to Entrepreneurial Ecosystems, including reduced levels of international collaborations and absorption of human capital. In short, it means that these policies are hampering knowledge flows in ecosystems.
Entrepreneurial ecosystems: Perspectives from Interregional and Global connectedness
Why do entrepreneurial ecosystems emerge where they do – and what determines their success. Christina Theodoraki, Associate Professor in Entrepreneurship and Strategic Management at TBS Education, discusses some of the considerations and why she finds the subject fascinating.