“…The study is unique in developing a theoretical argument that, apart from the stimulation of entrepreneurial activities with financial, regulatory, normative, and cognitive mechanisms of influence, public policy has the potential for leveraging the socio-psychological influences produced by migrant entrepreneurs in a cross-border setting. The proposed theory expands the socio-economic role of migrant entrepreneurs from that of job creators (Kerr & Kerr, 2018;Kauffman Foundation, 2015), capital investors (Flisi & Murat, 2011;Mullings, 2011), knowledge providers (Levin & Bernard, 2013), and institutional change agents (Williams, 2018) to socio-psychological role models who are able to stimulate micro-level changes in the entrepreneurial perceptions and attitudes of local individuals. The notion of immigrant role models is new to international business and migration policy research, as immigrants themselves have conventionally been approached as objects of the influence of role models in the host country (Aldrich & Waldinger, 1990;Saxenian, 1999;Contin-Pilart & Larraza-Kintana, 2015;Mayer, Harima, & Freiling, 2015).…”