Table of contents
Exploring how institutional trajectories and political controversies influence policymaking for SE: the case of Norway
Hilde Svrljuga Sætre, Hans Abraham HaugeThis study aims to analyse how top-level policymakers across the political left-right spectrum in a social-democratic welfare state understand social enterprise (SE), its relation…
Challenging the assumptions of social entrepreneurship education and repositioning it for the future: wonders of cultural, social, symbolic and economic capitals
Mine Karatas-Ozkan, Shahnaz Ibrahim, Mustafa Ozbilgin, Alain Fayolle, Graham Manville, Katerina Nicolopoulou, Ahu Tatli, Melike TunaliogluSocial entrepreneurship education (SEE) is gaining increasing attention globally. This paper aims to focus on how SEE may be better understood and reconfigured from a Bourdieusian…
The effect of network capabilities, trust and pricing and selling capabilities on the impact of social enterprise
Judith Cavazos-Arroyo, Rogelio Puente-DiazThe purpose of this paper is to analyze the effect of structural and relational network capabilities on trust, and its effect on pricing and selling capabilities, as well as their…
Vulnerable social enterprises: sensemaking of the COVID-19 crisis in the Czech Republic
Ondřej Kročil, Michal Müller, Jaroslava KubátováDrawing on Weick’s sensemaking perspective, this study aims to describe how Czech social entrepreneurs shape the shared meaning of the crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and…
Applying the stimulus-organism-response theory to investigate determinants of students’ social entrepreneurship: moderation role of perceived university support
Cong Doanh DuongThis study aims to integrate the stimulus-organism-response (SOR) theory with Mair and Noboa’s (2006) model to evaluate the stimulating role of education-related stimuli (i.e…
Nothing to lose: the rationales of grassroots financial innovations in contexts of extreme scarcity
Maria Jose Zapata Campos, Ester Barinaga, Richard Dimba Kiaka, Juan OcampoHighly deprived urban contexts, such as informal settlements in the global south, can turn into niches of extreme innovation and sparkle ingenuity out of necessity. But what are…
Institutional channeling and opportunity recognition: heterogeneous knowledge corridors as pathways to social entrepreneurship
Jason Lortie, Kevin C. Cox, Philip T. Roundy, Lee JarvisDespite intense scholarly interest in social entrepreneurship, opportunity recognition remains a poorly understood facet of the phenomenon. Linkages between the micro- and…
ISSN:
1750-8614e-ISSN:
1750-8533ISSN-L:
1750-8533Online date, start – end:
2005Copyright Holder:
Emerald Publishing LimitedOpen Access:
hybridEditor:
- Prof Michael Roy