The fundamental motivation for social enterprises is to address unmet needs, such as poverty alleviation, education inequality, or environmental sustainability.
Several theories underpin the study and practice of social entrepreneurship:
Social enterprises often occupy a hybrid space, utilizing market-driven strategies (trading, service delivery) to fund their social missions, rather than relying solely on grants or donations. Social Entrepreneurship: Concepts, Methodologie...
Social Entrepreneurship: Concepts, Methodologies, Tools, and Applications
Emphasizes that social enterprises are accountable to a broader group of stakeholders (community, environment) rather than just shareholders. The fundamental motivation for social enterprises is to
Analyzes how social entrepreneurs navigate or change the institutional environment (regulations, norms) to legitimize their ventures.
Social entrepreneurship represents a transformative, hybrid approach to business that blends entrepreneurial principles with a dedicated commitment to solving societal, environmental, or cultural challenges. Unlike traditional entrepreneurship, social entrepreneurship prioritizes social value creation over profit maximization, often operating at the intersection of for-profit and non-profit sectors to develop sustainable, innovative solutions. 1. Core Concepts and Definitions Analyzes how social entrepreneurs navigate or change the
Social entrepreneurs apply creative, disruptive methods to tackle persistent social problems that traditional market or state actors have failed to solve.