Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T21:19:14.819Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Family business research at a tipping point threshold

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 February 2015

Justin B Craig
Affiliation:
Australian Centre for Family Business, School of Business, Technology and Sustainable Development, Bond University, Australia
Ken Moores
Affiliation:
Australian Centre for Family Business, School of Business, Technology and Sustainable Development, Bond University, Australia
Carole Howorth
Affiliation:
Centre for Family Business, Institute for Entrepreneurship and Enterprise Development, Lancaster University Management School, Lancaster, UK
Panikkos Poutziouris
Affiliation:
Entrepreneurship – Family Business, Cyprus International Institute of Management; , EMRG – Family Business Initiatives, Manchester Business School; IFERA, International Family Enterprise Research Academy; – Family Business Academy, Nicosia, Cyprus

Abstract

In this paper, we report the frequency that family business research has been published by year and by discipline in top-tier journals as listed in the Journal Quality List (JQL) (Harzing 2008) to argue that family business research has reached a tipping point threshold. We suggest that the acceptance of family business research in top-tier journals is the tipping point that will enamor the field to a wider researcher audience and thereby further contribute to paradigmatic development.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press and Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anderson, AF, Qingsi, Z, Hua, X and Jianfeng, B (2003) China's floating population and the potential for HIV transmission: A social-behavioural perspective. AIDS Care 15(2): 7786.Google Scholar
Astrachan, JH (2003) Commentary on the special issue: The emergence of the field. Journal of Business Venturing 18(5): 567572.Google Scholar
Bork, D (1986) Family business, risky business. How to make it work. New York: AMACOM.Google Scholar
Cabell's Directory of Publishing Opportunities in Accounting, Economics and Finance (8th edn) (2005) Cabell's Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Cabell's Directory of Publishing Opportunities in Management and Marketing (9th edn) (2005) Cabell's Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Chan Kim, W and Mauborgne, R (2003) Tipping point leadership. Harvard Business Review 8(4): 6069.Google Scholar
Chua, JH, Chrisman, JJ and Sharma, P (1999) Defining the family-owned firm by behavior. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice 23(4): 1939.Google Scholar
Colli, A (2002) The History of Family Business. New Studies in Economic and Social History: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Daynes, G, Esplin, P and Kristensen, K (2004) Learning as an epidemic: The tipping point, freshman academy, and institutional change. Perspectives 6(4):113118.Google Scholar
Drayton, W (2002) The Citizen Sector: Becoming as entrepreneurial and competitive as business. California Management Review 44(3): 120132.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, KM and Hwang, SS (1990) Bringing community SES back in: Reanalyzing Black suburbanization patterns, 1960-1980. Social Science Quarterly 71: 766773.Google Scholar
Giacalone, RA (2009) Academic rankings in research institutions: A case of skewed mind-sets and professional amnesia. The Academy of Management Learning and Education 8(1): 122126.Google Scholar
Giles, MW, Cataldo, EF and Gatlin, DS (1975) White flight and percent black: The tipping point re-examined. Social Science Quarterly 56: 8592.Google Scholar
Gladwell, M (2000) The Tipping Point: How Little Things can make a Big Difference. Boston MA: Little, Brown and Company.Google Scholar
Grodzins, M (1958) The Metropolitan Area as a Racial Problem. Pittsburgh PA: University of Pittsburgh.Google Scholar
Handler, WC (1989) Methodological issues and considerations in studying family businesses. Family Business Review 2(3): 257276.Google Scholar
Harzing, AW (2008) Journal Quality List (32nd edn), 26 September. Available at http://www.harzing.com.Google Scholar
Heck, R, Hoy, F, Poutziouris, P and Steier, L (2008) Emerging paths of family entrepreneurship research. Journal of Small Business Management 46(3): 317330.Google Scholar
Hoy, F (2003) Commentary: Legitimizing family business scholarship in organizational research and education. Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice 27(4): 417422.Google Scholar
Ireland, RD, Reutzel, CR, and Webb, JW (2005) Entrepreneurship research in AMJ: What has been published, and what might the future hold? The Academy of Management Journal 48(4): 556564.Google Scholar
Klein, S (2003) Family business research in German publications 1990-2000. INSEAD Initiative for Family Enterprise Working Paper Series.Google Scholar
Kuhn, T (1974) Second thoughts on paradigms. In Suppe, F (ed.) The Structure of Scientific Theories, pp. 4594821, Urbana IL: University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Kuhn, TS (1996) The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (3rd. edn) Chicago IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Litz, R (1997) The family firm's exclusion from business school research: Explaining the void, addressing the opportunity. Entrepreneurship, Theory and Practice 21(3): 5571.Google Scholar
Marshall, H and Stahura, J (1979) Black and white population growth in American suburbs: Transition or parallel development? Social Forces 58: 305328.Google Scholar
Moores, K (2009) Paradigms and theory building in the domain of business families. Family Business Review, 22: 167180.Google Scholar
Ottensmann, JR (1995) Requiem for the tippingpoint hypothesis. Journal of Planning Literature 10: 131141.Google Scholar
Repenning, NP, Goncalves, P and Black, LJ (2001) Past the tipping point: The persistence of firefighting in product development. California Management Review 43(4): 4463.Google Scholar
Schelling, T (1971) Dynamic models of segregation. Journal of Mathematical Sociology 1: 143186.Google Scholar
Schelling, T (1978) Micromotives and Macrobehavior. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Sharma, P (2004) An overview of the field of family business studies: Current status and directions for the future. Family Business Review 17(1): 136.Google Scholar
Sharma, P, Hoy, F, Astrachan, J and Koiranen, M (2007) The practice-driven evolution of family business education. Journal of Business Research 60: 10121021.Google Scholar
Stinchcombe, AL, McDill, M and Walker, D (1969) Is there a racial tipping point in changing schools? Journal of Social Issues 25: 127136.Google Scholar
Wolfe, E (1963) The tipping point in racially-changing neighborhoods. Journal of the American Institute of Planners 29: 217222.Google Scholar
Zahra, S and Sharma, P (2004) Family business research: A strategic reflection. Family Business Review XVII(4): 331346.Google Scholar