Dr. Christopher Stevens
Office Location
Jepson Center 242C
Office Hours
Tuesday, Thursday 9-11
B.S.,
Northern Kentucky University, 1994; M.B.A., Case Western Reserve University,
2001; Ph.D. (Organizational Behavior), Case Western Reserve University, 2008.
Dr.
Stevens is Assistant Professor of Entrepreneurship at the Gonzaga University
School of Business, where he teaches courses in the entrepreneurship and social
entrepreneurship, and new venture creation.
Prior to pursing his Ph.D., Dr. Stevens spent 15 years in the
construction and construction consulting industries, working and living through
Europe and Asia as part of a multi-family-owned and run construction
concern. He has served as a strategic
and HR consultant for several small firms and startups in the construction and
consumer products sector. His research
focuses on a variety of areas of interest including social entrepreneurship,
venture success and failure, entrepreneurial passion, human resource management
in entrepreneurial firms, and Jesuit ethics, spirituality, moral imagination
and entrepreneurship. Dr. Stevens’
research has appeared in the Journal of
Business Venturing, Entrepreneurship
Theory and Practice, the Journal of
Nonprofit and Public Sector Marketing, Entrepreneurship
and Regional Development, and Human
Resource Management Review. He is
the author of a chapter in the recent Handbook of Social Entrepreneurship, and
has presented at numerous academic conferences on social entrepreneurship,
entrepreneurship education, and business school ethics and mission.
Recent
Publications:
Misfortunes or mistakes?
Cultural sense-making of entrepreneurial failure. Forthcoming,
Journal of Business Venturing, Issue
TDB with
Melissa S. Cardon and Ryland D. Potter
Social enterprises and the
timing of conception: Organizational identity tension, management and marketing. Forthcoming
2010, Journal of Nonprofit and Public
Sector Marketing, Vol. 22, No. 2 with
Brett R. Smith, Terri F. Barr, Joshua Knapp, and Benedetto L. Canatelli
Different types of social
entrepreneurship: The role of geography and embeddedness on the measurement
scaling of social value. Forthcoming
2010, Entrepreneurship and Regional
Development, Issue TBD with
Brett R. Smith
Social entrepreneurs and
earned income opportunities: The dilemma of earned income pursuit. Forthcoming,
Handbook of Research in Social Entrepreneurship (A. Fayolle and H.
Matalay, Eds.) with
Brett R. Smith and Terri F. Barr
The discriminant validity of
entrepreneurial passion, 2009,
Academy of Management Proceedings,
Chicago, Illinois. with
Melissa S. Cardon