Curriculum Vitaes
Profile Information
- Affiliation
- Associate Professor, Faculty of Economics Department of Management, Sophia University
- Degree
- DPhil in Management(University of Oxford)MPhil in Modern Japanese Studies with Distinction(University of Oxford)
- Researcher number
- 90906132
- ORCID ID
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5864-0452- J-GLOBAL ID
- 202101019586468240
- researchmap Member ID
- R000020508
Research Interests
4Research Areas
1Research History
4-
Apr, 2021 - Mar, 2022
Education
3-
Oct, 2016 - Jan, 2021
Awards
4Papers
10-
Small Business Economics, 1-22, Apr 11, 2025 Peer-reviewedLead authorAbstract This paper contributes to a better understanding of how place matters for the development of nascent Information and Communication Technology (ICT) entrepreneurial ecosystems (EEs). This qualitative study adopts a lens of neo-institutional theory, looking at EEs as organisational fields, and focuses on two comparative cases in Japan—Osaka-Kyoto and Fukuoka, which are developing “in the shadow” of the more established Tokyo EE. The data is based on semi-structured interviews and participant observations generated during fieldwork research in 2016–2020, analysed together with a set of archival data. The findings reveal similar gaps in the institutional infrastructure of the nascent EEs of Osaka-Kyoto and Fukuoka (for example, in funding, in the access to information and expertise from successful startups), in response to which their stakeholders engage undertake similar types of actions to obtain the missing/underdeveloped elements, including creating network connections within and between EEs (with particularly important links to Tokyo EE). However, the study shows that the existing and expected outcomes of these actions are moderated by certain elements underlying the EEs’ institutional infrastructure—local resources (stronger in Osaka-Kyoto) and place cohesion (stronger in Fukuoka). The latter concept is newly identified and defined in the paper. The findings of this paper become the basis for a process model of the nascent EEs’ development, have theoretical implications for research about EEs and for the comparative study of organisational fields, and offer insights for policy and practice. Plain English Summary Place continues to be critically important for the development of entrepreneurial ecosystems (EEs), even those focused on technology-related startup entrepreneurship that might be expected to be less dependent on place. By comparing the cases of two Information and Communication Technology (ICT) EEs in Japan (Osaka-Kyoto and Fukuoka, developing “in the shadow” of the more established Tokyo), the study shows the significant role of place cohesion (a newly defined concept, consisting of place-based collective identity and locations’ internal centralisation) and local resources in the nascent EEs’ development. The findings also confirm that various developmental pathways and configurations exist but note possible dangers (e.g. brain drain) when some key elements (e.g. funding) are accessed from another EE, even in the same country. Policymakers and practitioners should consider that intentionally working on strengthening place cohesion and local resources could help EEs’ development and that developing at least some locally based funding opportunities seems important for nascent EEs.
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Human Capital of East Asian Start-up Founders and Entrepreneurial Orientation: A Three-Country StudyAcademy of Management Proceedings, 2024(1), Aug, 2024 Peer-reviewed
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Proceedings of the 40th EGOS Colloquium. European Group for Organizational Studies (EGOS): Milan, Italy, Jul, 2024 Peer-reviewed
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Entrepreneurial Ecosystems in Cities and Regions: Emergence, Evolution, and Future. R. Huggins, F. Kitagawa, D. Prokop, C. Theodoraki, & P. Thompson (Eds.). Oxford University Press, 404-421, Mar 14, 2024 Peer-reviewedInvitedLead author
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The Association of Japanese Business Studies Conference Proceedings, 35th Annual AJBS Meeting Warsaw, Poland, 18, Jul, 2023 Peer-reviewedLead author
Books and Other Publications
3-
SGH Publishing House, 2025 (ISBN: 9788380307216)
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Springer, 2018 (ISBN: 9789811315275)
Presentations
35-
Colloquium of the European Group for Organizational Studies, Milan, Jul 4, 2024
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Annual conference of the Society for Advancement of Socio-Economics, Limerick, Jun 28, 2024
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Annual conference of the Society for Advancement of Socio-Economics, Limerick, Jun 27, 2024
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Entrepreneurial Ecosystems in Regions and Cities - Book Launch Event, University of Oxford, May 17, 2024 Invited
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Workshop of the Colloquium of Organization Studies (COORS), Waseda University, Jan 27, 2024
Teaching Experience
18-
Apr, 2024 - PresentRESEARCH SEMINAR (Sophia University)
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Apr, 2023 - PresentINTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT 2 (Sophia University)
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Apr, 2022 - PresentPRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT (Sophia University)
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Apr, 2022 - Present経営基礎研究セミナーⅡ (BASIC RESEARCH SEMINAR IN MANAGEMENT 2) (Sophia University)
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Apr, 2022 - PresentORGANIZATIONAL THEORY AND ANALYSIS (Sophia University)
Professional Memberships
6Research Projects
7-
Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2022 - Mar, 2025
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Sweden-Japan Initiation Research Collaboration (SJ-IRC) on Academic Knowledge Transfer to Society, The Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education) (STINT), Apr, 2024 - Jun, 2024
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Incentive Allowance for Dissemination of Individual Research, Sophia University, Faculty of Economics, 2024
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Grant-in-Aid for Creation of Research Base, Waseda University, Oct, 2021 - Mar, 2022
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Sasakawa Fund Travel Grants, Sasakawa Fund, Oriental Institute, University of Oxford, Dec, 2019 - Jun, 2020
Academic Activities
5Other
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Apr, 2022 - PresentResearch Institute of Business Administration, Waseda University
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Jan, 2020 - Mar, 2021Certified Teacher Training Program at the University of Oxford