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For centuries, almost all economic activity was family-based. The family business rested on the division of labor among family members. Therefore the family was both socially and economically the foundation of the family business. Families were not only production units, but also education and consumption units that conveyed norm structures, values and professional identity to next generation. Although female family members have always been active participants in family businesses over the centuries, their role has often been neglected in previous studies.Women in Business Families: From Past to Present presents both conceptual and theoretically informed empirical papers addressing three related themes relevant for family business and gender in past and in present: heroic women entrepreneurs; invisibility / visibility of women in businesses; and business succession. The book Women in Business Families: From Past to Present balances between both historical and contemporary analyses. The chapters integrate the notions of time and gender in focusing on family businesses or business families in past and in present. This volume will be of vital reading to researchers and academics in the fields of Gender Studies, Family Business, Organizational studies, Entrepreneurship and the various related disciplines.
Jarna Heinonen is a Professor of Entrepreneurship at the University of Turku, School of Economics, Finland.Kirsi Vainio-Korhonen is Professor of Finnish History at the University of Turku, Faculty of Humanities, Finland.
IntroductionJarna Heinonen and Kirsi Vainio-Korhonen Gender, Economy and TimeKovalainen AnneSection 1: Heroic female entrepreneurs/heroism Is She That Special? The Long History of Business Women as Unlikely Heroic Entrepreneurs Anu Lahtinen The Mistress of the IronVeli Pekka Toropainen Female Manager in the Family Firm Hackman & Co in the Nineteenth-century Russia and FinlandUlla IjäsSection 2: Invisibility/Visibility (In)visibility in the Family BusinessHenrietta Nilson ‘All the Days of Their Lives’: The Lifecycle of a Family BusinessDeborah Simonton Statutory Invisibility: Urban Business Women Legal and Political Rights in the 18th Century FinlandJarkko Keskinen and Kirsi Vainio-KorhonenSection 3: Succession Daughters and Family Business SuccessionFrancesca Maria Cesaroni and Annalisa Sentuti He Suddenly Died: Family Firms, Unplanned Succession and GriefJarna Heinonen and Elisabet Ljunggren Conclusions and Moving Forward Jarna Heinonen and Kirsi Vainio-Korhonen