@article{Amanor-Boadu:43780,
      recid = {43780},
      author = {Amanor-Boadu, Vincent},
      title = {Putting Entrepreneurship into Agricultural Economics:  Research and Teaching Perspectives-Discussion},
      journal = {Journal of Agricultural and Applied Economics},
      address = {2006-08},
      number = {1379-2016-112838},
      pages = {4},
      year = {2006},
      abstract = {Two of the three papers presented in this session  illustrate the challenges of defining the boundaries of  entrepreneurship, and the other extends our perceptions  about the concept to encompass interorganizational  relationships.  Together, they provide a reason to hope  that entrepreneurship can enter the language and thinking  of agricultural economists and influence our research,  teaching, and outreach activities.  The work presented by  Ross and Westgren and Klein and Bullock provide good  reference material for students and scholars interested in  the evolution of economists’ thinking about  entrepreneurship.  Unfortunately, they, like many before  them, fail to address the pertinent gap in the literature:   the boundary of entrepreneurship.  But they can be forgiven  because they make an implicit assumption about the absence  of a clear boundary and proceed to address their core  questions: i.e., can we teach entrepreneurship and what are  an entrepreneur’s rewards?},
      url = {http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/43780},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.22004/ag.econ.43780},
}