4.4 Article

Accelerating the transformation to a sustainable food economy by strengthening the sustainable entrepreneurial ecosystem

Journal

FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fsufs.2022.970265

Keywords

sustainable entrepreneurial ecosystems; sustainable business practices; small business sustainability; entrepreneurial ecosystem functions; sustainable food economy; sustainable economic development; sustainable food systems; food economy transformation

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Strengthening the sustainable entrepreneurial ecosystem (SEE), especially its support for small to medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), is crucial for accelerating the transition to a sustainable economy. This article evaluates 16 projects aimed at developing SEE functioning in the Greater Phoenix Area of Arizona to promote a sustainable food economy. The findings suggest that most of the projects had positive effects on the SEE, providing valuable insights and guidelines for future practice.
Strengthening the sustainable entrepreneurial ecosystem (SEE), particularly its support functions for small to medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), is increasingly seen as an important means of accelerating the transformation to a sustainable economy. Little is known, however, about how to strengthen SEEs. In this article, we evaluate a series of 16 projects intended to develop SEE functioning to accelerate transformation to a sustainable food economy in the Greater Phoenix Area of Arizona. We use an evaluative framework designed around a set of ten SEE support functions to qualitatively assess the baseline state of the SEE, how projects were executed, the effects of these projects, and the overall changes in the SEE that resulted. The findings indicate all but one projects had positive effects on the SEE (nine weak, six medium). In conjunction with other developments, the projects raised the overall SEE performance from the baseline state of two functions being performed at only minimal level, to six functions being performed minimally, and one at a medium level. Insights gained from comparing results across projects suggest tentative guidelines for future practice, which should be useful for SEE stakeholders, including policy makers, economic development agencies, financial institutions, consultants, and educators, interested in strengthening SEEs. Researchers engaging in studies on strengthening SEEs may benefit from the evaluative framework enabling larger cross-case comparisons.

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