INTERA December Virtual Lab Model Meeting
The INTERA December 2024 virtual lab meeting will be held on December 11, 2024, from 1:00pm to 2:30pm (UK Time)
Speaker;
Aoife Brophy, Lecturer in Innovation and Enterprise at the University of Oxford
The INTERA December 2024 virtual lab meeting will be held on December 11, 2024, from 1:00pm to 2:30pm (UK Time)
Speaker;
Aoife Brophy, Lecturer in Innovation and Enterprise at the University of Oxford
Our October 2024 virtual lab meeting will be held on October 9, 2024 from 1:00pm to 2:30pm (UK Time).
Speakers;
Margot Leger, PhD Candidate at Utrecht University School of Economics
Ouafaa Hmaddi, Assistant Professor of Economics and Business at the City College of New York
The INTERA virtual lab meeting will be held on September 11, 2024, from 1:00pm to 2:30pm (UK Time)
Speakers;
Gerald Milanzi, Lecturer in the Faculty of Business, Law, and Digital Technologies at the University of Winchester
Jaana Serres, Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Groningen.
The INTERA June virtual lab meeting will be held on June 12, 2024 at 1:00pm to 2:30pm (UK Time).
Speakers;
Nicole Ahoya, Doctoral Researcher at the University of Lucerne
Tessa Pijnaker, Medior Researcher at the Verwey-Jonker Institute
Our April 2024 virtual lab meeting will be held on April 17, 2024 at 1:00pm to 2:30pm (UK Time).
Speakers;
Tabea Brüning, Doctoral Student at Leuphana University of Lüneburg
Parijat Chakrabarti, PostDoc at the University of Michigan
The INTERA February 2024 Virtual Lab meeting will be held on February 14, 2024 at 1:00pm to 2:30pm (UK Time).
Speakers;
Alexandrine Royer, PhD candidate in Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge
Maria Schmidt, PhD Candidate at RWTH Aachen University
We will hold our January 2024 virtual lab meeting on January 17, 2024 at 1:00pm to 2:30pm (UK Time)
Speakers;
John Kieti, Global ICT4D Technical Specialist
N'zoret Innocent Assoman, Doctoral Candidate at Kansas State University
Our December 2023 virtual lab meeting will be held on Wednesday, December 13, 2023, from 1:00pm to 2:30pm (UK Time).
Speakers;
Kyeyoung Shin, DPhil Candidate at the University of Oxford
Tim Weiss, Assistant Professor at the Department of Management & Entrepreneurship at Imperial College London and Joel Bothello, Associate Professor in Management at the John Molson School of Business
Our first virtual lab session took place on Wednesday, October 11 2023 from 1 to 2.30 pm (UK time).
Presentations;
Breaking Bad: The Mechanisms of Institutionalizing Destructiveness in an Africa’s Illegal Gold Mining Context.
Presenter: Fardeen Abdulrahman Dodo, PhD Candidate at the University of Bologna
Discussant: Joel Bothello, Associate Professor in Management at the John Molson School of Business
LAKOU: An Exploration of Entrepreneurial Communities in Haiti
Presenter: Howard Jean-Denis, Assistant Professor of Strategic Management at Pepperdine University
Discussant: Helen Haugh, Associate Professor in Community Enterprise at University of Cambridge
We are excited to announce the second meeting to launch the INTERA virtual lab model. This will deepen research on Africa-related phenomena in digital technologies and entrepreneurship. This meeting will be held on September 13 at 1 to 2pm London Time.
We have 35 predoctoral, doctoral, postdoctoral and faculty members that are already signed up.
We look forward to meeting you all.
It is with great excitement that we announce the launch of the INTERA virtual lab model to deepen research on Africa-related phenomena. The first meeting will be held on August 30 2023 at 1 to 2pm GMT.
We have 35 predoctoral, doctoral, postdoctoral and faculty members signed up to the virtual lab.
We look forward to interacting with you all and a successful launch.
It is with great joy that we would like to announce a very special event, a panel discussion on “Life after the PhD, Outside Academia” taking place Tuesday February 9 @ 5 pm (UK time).
We have three excellent panellists who are members of our collective:
Marlen de la Chaux (International Labour Organization)
Nicolas Friederici (Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society; Strive Community; Caribou Digital)
Eleanor Marchant (Facebook/Metaverse – tbc)
The panel will also be featured as a podcast in coproduction with the Organization and Management Theory division of the Academy of Management.
Gender and race have been noted to be embedded in how entrepreneurship is practised as well as how entrepreneurial resources are allocated in entrepreneurship. The research is exploring the resourcing and belonging practices of women entrepreneurs using an entrepreneur as practice approach. It is focused on black women entrepreneurs in South Africa who are noted to experience a 'double negative' of being both black and females in a field that has historically been associated with whiteness and maleness
By: Angela Okune and Leonida Mutuku (iHub Research).
Discussant: Seyram Avle
Abstract:
Drawing out a genealogy of Kenyan STS that links to and also complicates Nairobi as a hub for techno-capital and venture philanthropy, in this essay, we build on work by critical computing and communications scholars to better understand the increasingly fraught discussions about race, privilege, expertise and capital which are transpiring in the Nairobi tech sector. As founding members of iHub Research, the research department of Nairobi’s flagship co-working technology space, we interweave our experiences from five years of strategizing and developing the research department of Nairobi’s flagship technology center with critical analysis of policy documents, research reports and funder narratives to understand the emergence of Nairobi as “Silicon Savannah” and the production of the Black African Techpreneur as another figure of international development.
What is the role of incubators and hubs in the cultivation of entrepreneurialism? A qualitative case study among young, urban professionals in South Africa
How are entrepreneurial aspirations cultivated in Johannesburg’s ecosystem of start-up hubs, events, and incubation programs? In a context of conflicting expectations and (im)possibilities for economic success, I look at the way entrepreneurial programs attract and select participants, and the stories and performances they produce. Rather than evaluate the effects of their interventions, I thus focus on the subjectivation processes that take place in the interactions between a globalized discourse, local (hi)stories and aspiring individuals.
Paper by Lieve de Coninck, PhD Candidate University of Amsterdam
Discussant Dr Andrea Jimenez, Lecturer at the University of Sheffield