Part of a two-volume series that provides critical perspectives on current entrepreneurship research, theories, methods, assumptions, and beliefs, this volume brings together 10 chapters by entrepreneurship, business, and management researchers from Europe. They discuss the use of an extended stage model for the evaluation and adoption of e-business in the small business sector in the Middle East; entrepreneurship curriculum development and the role of thinking as an entrepreneur; the decision-making processes past the start-up stage for small businesses growth; the process of facilitation of entrepreneurial learning; the interactions of formal and informal forms of small business support; the role of volunteer business mentoring in improving financing and financial management in youth enterprises in deprived under-served neighborhoods; the Technium initiative in Wales to encourage business startups and growth in the knowledge economy sector; dimensions of the "open space" of freely available resources for entrepreneurship; and conflict relationships in a team-based research project.