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Unjani “clinics in a container”: social franchising in South Africa

Margie Sutherland (Gordon Institute of Business Science, University of Pretoria, Johannesburg, South Africa)
Kerryn Krige (Network for Social Entrepreneurs, Gordon Institute of Business Science, University of Pretoria, Johannesburg, South Africa)

Publication date: 9 January 2017

Abstract

Subject area

This case study focuses on social entrepreneurship in emerging markets, looking at what is social entrepreneurship, theories of market failure, opportunity generation through effectuation, social franchising and funding.

Study level/applicability

Students of social entrepreneurship, development studies, sustainable livelihoods and asset-based development. It is useful for customised or short programmes or for students with a background in business (e.g. Diploma in Business Administration/MBA/custom programmes) wanting to understand social enterprise and blended theories of social and economic change.

Case overview

The case tells the story of Unjani container clinics which are providing affordable, quality access to people who struggle to access South Africa’s crumbling public health system. Dr Iain Barton recognised the role that nurses can play to relieve pressure on the system, by providing primary healthcare. He piloted Unjani using shipping containers as clinics with support from his company, Imperial Health Sciences. The story of Unjani is therefore one of startup and sustainable growth, partnership and building independent, self-sustaining social enterprises in a franchising system. The theory explored includes the importance of context, the role of market failure in spotting opportunity, developing opportunity through effectuation, defining social entrepreneurship and funding and growing the organisation.

Expected learning outcomes

The teaching objectives are framed by Mair (2010) who finds that where social entrepreneurs operate affects what they do and how they do it. Objective 1: Explores the influence of context on social entrepreneurship helping students frame a definition of social entrepreneurship. Objective 2: Students are able to connect the theory of market failure to opportunity identification and effectuation for social entrepreneurs. Objective 3: Students apply the definition of social entrepreneurship based on Santos’ (2010) Positive Theory. Objective 4: Students will be able to apply knowledge of social franchising models, as an approach to scaling. Objective 5: Students understand the principles of resource dependency theory and are able to use the funding spectrum as a tool to identify funding types.

Supplementary materials

Links to two videos are provided in the case. Recommendations are also made for materials to be used in the class, e.g. Global Competitiveness Index and Gapminder World, which are excellent tools to demonstrate the social and economic growth divide.

Subject code

CSS 3: Entrepreneurship.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the Unjani team: Dr Iain Barton, Lynda Toussant and Siza Nkozi.

Citation

Sutherland, M. and Krige, K. (2017), "Unjani “clinics in a container”: social franchising in South Africa", , Vol. 7 No. 1. https://doi.org/10.1108/EEMCS-06-2016-0151

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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