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Rule-breaking,crime, and entrepreneurship: A replication and extension study with 37-year longitudinal data
Affiliation:1. Department of Developmental Psychology and Center for Applied Developmental Science, Friedrich Schiller University, Am Steiger 3/1, 07743 Jena, Germany;2. Department of Psychology, Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden;3. Department of Psychology, Stockholm Stress Center, Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden;4. WorkWell, Research Unit for Economic and Management Sciences, North-West University, South Africa;1. Oregon State University, College of Business, 478 Austin Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331, United States of America;2. University of Tennessee, Haslam College of Business, 916 Volunteer Boulevard 413 SMC, Knoxville, TN 37966-0545, United States of America;3. Syracuse University, Whitman School of Management, 721 University Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13244-2450, United States of America
Abstract:Is there an intimate biographical relationship between entrepreneurship and antisocial tendencies? Drawing from Zhang and Arvey's retrospective study [Zhang, Z. & Arvey, R.D. (2009). Rule breaking in adolescence and entrepreneurial status: An empirical investigation. Journal of Business Venturing, 24(5), 436–447], which found a link between entrepreneurship status of male adults and their recalled early antisocial rule-breaking behavior in adolescence, the present study utilized prospective longitudinal data from a Swedish cohort study to clarify the connection between antisocial rule-breaking, crime, and entrepreneurship by applying a developmental perspective. Regression results, which controlled for early socioeconomic background and intellectual competencies, indeed identified early antisocial rule-breaking behavior in adolescence as a valid positive predictor of a subsequent entrepreneurial career in adulthood in men (but not in women). In contrast, registered crime (teenage crime, adult crime, and prototypical trajectories of criminal behavior) as well as rule-breaking attitude in adolescence, as a more latent form of early antisocial tendencies, were relatively unimportant in the prediction of entrepreneurship in both genders. The results are discussed with a focus on rule-breaking and agency theories of entrepreneurship, youth theories, and the importance of looking at gender differences in entrepreneurial development.
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