Abstract
In this article, we apply deductive content analysis to the 100 most influential publications in the field of social entrepreneurship (SE) to identify the normative assumptions in SE scholarship. Using eight contemporary schools of thought in political philosophy as a template for analysis, we identify the philosophies underlying SE literature and the important consequences of their (often ignored) normative stances, such as: ambiguous concepts, justifications and critiques, and normative contradictions. Our study contributes to the SE literature by proposing that political philosophy can help to identify what counts as the ‘social’ in SE. We are showing some of the field’s inherent normative tensions that could dampen its impact, and propose ways in which a normative awareness would help to establish a basis upon which to evaluate and demonstrate the social, economic, and cultural impact of SE.
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Data availability
The data that support the findings of this study are available in the Zenodo repository. The paper sample database is available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4767012. The Atlas.TI coding file is available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4767088. The paper’s final coding is available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4767203.
Notes
A Pareto optimal allocation of resources is one in which it is impossible to reallocate resources to make someone better off without making someone else worse off, where ‘better off’ means gaining utility or satisfying more preferences. Pareto optimality is a necessary (but not sufficient) condition of a utilitarian criterion. Since Paretianism focuses on utility rather than rights or freedom (Sen, 1979), we categorise references to market (Pareto) efficiency as a utilitarian idea.
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Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Gibson Burell for his editorial work as well as the anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments. We would also like to thank our colleague Thibault Daudigeos, Stephane Jaumier, Ismaël Al-Amoudi and Fiona Ottavianni for their valuable feedback and expertise.
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Appendices
Appendix A: Description of political philosophies
Utilitarianism
Utilitarianism is a consequentialist philosophy that claims we should maximize human welfare, or utility. Consequentialism means that the ‘rightness’ of an action is judged by the consequences of this action. The concept of utility is central in utilitarianism and different streams of thought define it in different ways. It can be pleasure (in hedonistic utilitarianism), any mental state that people wish to experience (since we might want to experience something other than pleasure), or the satisfaction of informed preferences. Informed (or rational) preferences are the preferences we would have if we had all information concerning the consequences of my actions, and if my preferences themselves were not restrained by beliefs preventing me from having certain aspirations.
In utilitarianism, human welfare is the aggregation of utilities. Each person’s utility must be given equal weight in the calculation of human welfare. The most important critiques addressed to utilitarianism are that summing utilities does not allow for consideration of the distribution of utilities (inequalities) and that the focus on utility accords no intrinsic value to rights or freedoms.
Liberal egalitarianism
Starting from the critique of the inequality of resource distribution that can arise from utilitarianism, liberal egalitarian theories aim at defining the ‘fair share’ of resources that each person deserves. Rawls defines then two principles about how to distribute resources:
“all social primary goods – liberty and opportunity, income and wealth, and the bases of self-respect – are to be distributed equally unless an unequal distribution of any or all of these goods is to the advantage of the least favoured” (Rawls, 1971, p.303, cited by Kymlicka, 2002).
These principles are justified by reference to our intuitions regarding the ‘veil of ignorance’ thought experiment – that if we did not know what our place in society would be, we would choose such a distribution to compensate for social and natural inequalities.
There are various kinds of egalitarianism rooted in Rawls’ foundational work. For example, Amartya Sen criticizes Rawls, arguing that with the same ‘primary goods’ different people cannot achieve equal outcomes. For example, a disabled person cannot achieve the same thing as an able-bodied person, even if they have the same bundle of primary goods. For this reason, Sen proposes that equality of capabilities, rather than primary goods, should be the basis of an egalitarian theory of justice (Sen, 2001).
Libertarianism
Libertarianism uses various arguments to justify the free market and property rights against egalitarian redistribution. We can distinguish four different arguments justifying absolute property rights. First, the voluntary agreement argument states that if people voluntarily give money to others in exchange for some good, the result must be fair (if not necessarily equal) since the trade was freely chosen. Second, the mutual advantage argument states that rational agents can choose to define moral conventions when they work for their mutual advantage, for example to solve social dilemmas.
Next, the self-ownership argument claims that what is produced with one’s own talents is one’s property. Then, in order to treat people as equals and as ends in themselves, one cannot violate someone else’s exercise of his or her absolute property rights. All property rights acquired through chosen exchanges are thus legitimate. Concerning the appropriation of resources that are not created by humans, unowned resources can be freely appropriated as long as it does not worsen the conditions of others, even if the resulting distribution is not equal. Finally, the argument of liberty establishes liberty as a fundamental value and defines the goal of society as ‘maximizing liberty’ or giving people the most extensive liberty compatible with the same liberty for all.
Marxism
Marxists denounce the exploitation and alienation of workers by capitalists (owners of the means of production), and argue in favour of the socialization of the mean of production as a solution. Marxism gives value to self-realization in work. Labour in the capitalist system is viewed as alienating since the worker loses power over his or her own labour. Technically, exploitation is defined as the capitalist appropriation of the added value produced by the worker.
According to the labour theory of value employed by traditional Marxists, the worker is the only agent who produces value. S/he is therefore exploited when capitalists receive some of the value s/he creates. As this theory of value is close to the libertarian view inasmuch as it assigns property rights according to people’s labour, some contemporary Marxists avoid it and instead converge with a liberal egalitarian argument to promote an equal distribution of the means of production.
Communitarianism
Communitarians investigate the role of communities within society. The schools of thought are diverse, but their reflexions centre around a common set of questions that aim at resituating the individual in its social context. Communitarians question the liberal egalitarian paradigm from a perspective of cultural relativism. Certain communities defend particular ways of life and claim the liberty to perpetuate them. Questions raised by this approach include: To what extent can certain ways of life and visions of the common good be promoted? Can some ways of life be promoted against individuals’ rights of self-determination (the rights to choose and revise one’s conception of the good), defended by liberal egalitarianism?
Communitarians also argue that social deliberation is necessary to define a conception of the good and question whether and how the state should intervene to encourage the formation of a pluralist ‘offering’ of cultures. Furthermore, communitarians question the bases of social unity necessary to allow citizens to trust each other, realize solidary and accept democratic decisions. The response of western democracies has been to build a relatively neutral national identity based on a common language and history.
Citizenship theory
While liberal egalitarian theories define citizenship as individual rights and entitlements, citizenship theories shift the focus and try to “identify the virtues and practices needed to promote and maintain the sorts of institutions and policies defended within theories of justice” (Kymlicka, 2002, p. 287). Different theories of justice lead to different visions of citizenship, and citizenship debates concern which kinds of virtues should be promoted and how. The ‘virtues’ of citizens include participation in political institutions and in public debate, but also ‘civility’ in how citizen treat each other. The potential ‘seedbeds’ of civic virtues identified by citizenship theorists have been ‘civil society’ and education through public schools.
Multiculturalism
Multiculturalism addresses the problem of cultural injustices, whereby a minority group suffers cultural domination, non-recognition or disrespect. It asks if a ‘politics of recognition’ and the attribution of differentiated rights for particular groups can be justified. These groups include, for example, indigenous peoples, national minorities, immigrants, ethnocultural groups, ethnoreligious groups, refugees, etc.
Multiculturalism began as a communitarian critique of liberalism, but liberals tried to integrate it. Within a liberal framework, minorities’ claims can be separated into asking for the right to protect their group against their own members (e.g., those who refuse to follow the community’s rules) or the right to protect their group against external pressures of wider society (Kymlicka, 2002, p. 340). For egalitarians, the first claim is not legitimate because it implies restricting individual rights, while the second is legitimate as it implies realizing or expanding such rights. Minority rights claims are also a response to nation state building processes that tend to impose a particular language and/or culture on minorities.
Feminism
Each political theory is represented within feminism, yet within this diversity feminists share a common core of critiques against mainstream political theories and their incapacity to consider women’s interests (Kymlicka, 2002, p. 377). First, the principle of non-discrimination against the female gender is not sufficient to rule out sexism. The concept of domination introduces the idea that society is defined for men. The more social institutions are designed for men, the fewer arbitrary discriminations are needed to exclude women because they will simply fail to fit positions defined for men (Kymlicka, 2002, pp. 382–383) (e.g. minimal weight requirements to enter the army, the incompatibility of childcare and full-time work, etc.).
Second, classical theories draw a division between the public and private spheres. In this way, they neglect the question of equality within the family. Establishing a family has different consequences for men and women. Women perform most domestic work, must choose between career and family, and often become economically dependent on men who thus gain more decision-making power within the family (Kymlicka, 2002, p. 387). Contemporary feminism additionally argues that ‘feminine’ moral reasoning, through the ethic of care, can be a source of moral insight. While theories of justice focus on moral principles universally applicable and based on concepts such as rights and fairness, the ethic of care focuses on the development of moral dispositions that allow one to identify appropriate responses to particular cases based on concepts of responsibilities and relationships (Kymlicka, 2002, p. 401).
Appendix B: References of the sample
Author | Title | Publication title | Year | Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|
Austin, James; Stevenson, Howard; Wei-Skillern, Jane | Social and Commercial Entrepreneurship: Same, Different, or Both? | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2006 | 2658 |
Mair, Johanna; Marti, Ignasi | Entrepreneurship in and around institutional voids: A case study from Bangladesh | Journal of Business Venturing | 2009 | 2505 |
Alvord, Sarah H.; Brown, L. David; Letts, Christine W | Social entrepreneurship and societal transformation: An exploratory study | The journal of applied behavioral science | 2004 | 1984 |
Peredo, Ana María; McLean, Murdith | Social entrepreneurship: A critical review of the concept | Journal of World Business | 2006 | 1394 |
Zahra, Shaker A.; Gedajlovic, Eric; Neubaum, Donald O.; Shulman, Joel M | A typology of social entrepreneurs: Motives, search processes and ethical challenges | Journal of Business Venturing | 2009 | 1369 |
Murphy, Patrick J.; Coombes, Susan M | A Model of Social Entrepreneurial Discovery | Journal of Business Ethics | 2009 | 1182 |
Thompson, John L | The world of the social entrepreneur | International Journal of Public Sector Management | 2002 | 1044 |
Weerawardena, Jay; Mort, Gillian Sullivan | Investigating social entrepreneurship: A multidimensional model | Journal of World Business | 2006 | 1020 |
Thompson, John; Alvy, Geoff; Lees, Ann | Social entrepreneurship – a new look at the people and the potential | Management Decision | 2000 | 1004 |
Eikenberry, A. M.; Kluver, J. D | The marketization of the nonprofit sector: Civil society at risk? | Public Administration Review | 2004 | 965 |
Shaw, Eleanor; Carter, Sara | Social entrepreneurship: Theoretical antecedents and empirical analysis of entrepreneurial processes and outcomes | Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development | 2007 | 867 |
Seelos, Christian; Mair, Johanna | Social entrepreneurship: Creating new business models to serve the poor | Business Horizons | 2005 | 859 |
Dacin, Peter A.; Dacin, M. Tina; Matear, Margaret | Social Entrepreneurship: Why We Don't Need a New Theory and How We Move Forward From Here | The Academy of Management Perspectives | 2010 | 847 |
Short, Jeremy C.; Moss, Todd W.; Lumpkin, G. T | Research in Social Entrepreneurship: Past Contributions and Future Opportunities | Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal | 2009 | 793 |
Defourny, Jacques; Nyssens, Marthe | Conceptions of Social Enterprise and Social Entrepreneurship in Europe and the United States: Convergences and Divergences | Journal of Social Entrepreneurship | 2010 | 730 |
Santos, Filipe M | A Positive Theory of Social Entrepreneurship | Journal of Business Ethics | 2012 | 706 |
Mair, Johanna; Noboa, Ernesto | Social entrepreneurship: How intentions to create a social venture are formed | Social Entrepreneurship | 2006 | 649 |
Chell, Elizabeth | Social enterprise and entrepreneurship: towards a convergent theory of the entrepreneurial process | International small business journal | 2007 | 622 |
Zahra, Shaker A.; Rawhouser, Hans N.; Bhawe, Nachiket; Neubaum, Donald O.; Hayton, James C | Globalization of social entrepreneurship opportunities | Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal | 2008 | 610 |
Dacin, M. Tina; Dacin, Peter A.; Tracey, Paul | Social Entrepreneurship: A Critique and Future Directions | Organization Science | 2011 | 575 |
Nicholls, Alex | The Legitimacy of Social Entrepreneurship: Reflexive Isomorphism in a Pre-Paradigmatic Field | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2010 | 569 |
Sharir, M.; Lerner, M | Gauging the success of social ventures initiated by individual social entrepreneurs | Journal of World Business | 2006 | 553 |
Di Domenico, MariaLaura; Haugh, Helen; Tracey, Paul | Social Bricolage: Theorizing Social Value Creation in Social Enterprises | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2010 | 550 |
Waddock, Sandra A.; Post, James E | Social Entrepreneurs and Catalytic Change | Public Administration Review | 1991 | 529 |
Fowler, A | NGDOs as a moment in history: beyond aid to social entrepreneurship or civic innovation? | Third World Quarterly | 2000 | 521 |
Tracey, Paul; Phillips, Nelson; Jarvis, Owen | Bridging Institutional Entrepreneurship and the Creation of New Organizational Forms: A Multilevel Model | Organization Science | 2011 | 508 |
Lepoutre, Jan; Justo, Rachida; Terjesen, Siri; Bosma, Niels | Designing a global standardized methodology for measuring social entrepreneurship activity: the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor social entrepreneurship study | Small Business Economics | 2013 | 450 |
Spear, Roger | Social entrepreneurship: a different model? | International Journal of Social Economics | 2006 | 444 |
Montgomery, A.; Dacin, Peter; Dacin, M | Collective Social Entrepreneurship: Collaboratively Shaping Social Good | Journal of Business Ethics | 2012 | 373 |
Haugh, Helen | A research agenda for social entrepreneurship | Social enterprise journal | 2005 | 360 |
Robinson, Jeffrey | Navigating social and institutional barriers to markets: How social entrepreneurs identify and evaluate opportunities | Social entrepreneurship | 2006 | 357 |
Bacq, S.; Janssen, F | The multiple faces of social entrepreneurship: A review of definitional issues based on geographical and thematic criteria | Entrepreneurship & Regional Development | 2011 | 356 |
Nicholls, Alex | 'We do good things, don't we?': 'Blended Value Accounting' in social entrepreneurship | Accounting Organizations and Society | 2009 | 355 |
Perrini, Francesco; Vurro, Clodia | Social entrepreneurship: Innovation and social change across theory and practice | Social entrepreneurship | 2006 | 355 |
Korosec, Ronnie L.; Berman, Evan M | Municipal support for social entrepreneurship | Public Administration Review | 2006 | 340 |
Thompson, John; Doherty, Bob | The diverse world of social enterprise: A collection of social enterprise stories | International Journal of Social Economics | 2006 | 340 |
Dey, Pascal; Steyaert, Chris | The politics of narrating social entrepreneurship | Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places in the Global Economy | 2010 | 314 |
Corner, Patricia Doyle; Ho, Marcus | How Opportunities Develop in Social Entrepreneurship | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2010 | 312 |
Tan, Wee-Liang; Williams, John; Tan, Teck-Meng | Defining the ‘Social’ in ‘Social Entrepreneurship’: Altruism and Entrepreneurship | The International Entrepreneurship and Management Journal | 2005 | 307 |
Cho, Albert Hyunbae | Politics, values and social entrepreneurship: A critical appraisal | Social entrepreneurship | 2006 | 295 |
Smith, Wendy K.; Besharov, Marya L.; Wessels, Anke K.; Chertok, Michael | A paradoxical leadership model for social entrepreneurs: Challenges, leadership skills, and pedagogical tools for managing social and commercial demands | Academy of Management Learning & Education | 2012 | 281 |
Hockerts, Kai | Entrepreneurial opportunity in social purpose business ventures | Social entrepreneurship | 2006 | 272 |
Ansari, Shahzad; Munir, Kamal; Gregg, Tricia | Impact at the 'Bottom of the Pyramid': The Role of Social Capital in Capability Development and Community Empowerment | Journal of Management Studies | 2012 | 250 |
Anderson, Robert B.; Dana, Leo Paul; Dana, Teresa E | Indigenous land rights, entrepreneurship, and economic development in Canada: "Opting-in" to the global economy | Journal of World Business | 2006 | 247 |
Smith, Wendy K.; Gonin, Michael; Besharov, Marya L | Managing Social-Business Tensions: A Review and Research Agenda for Social Enterprise | Business Ethics Quarterly | 2013 | 247 |
Roper, Juliet; Cheney, George | The meanings of social entrepreneurship today | Corporate Governance: The international journal of business in society | 2005 | 237 |
Nga, Joyce Koe Hwee; Shamuganathan, Gomathi | The Influence of Personality Traits and Demographic Factors on Social Entrepreneurship Start Up Intentions | Journal of Business Ethics | 2010 | 236 |
Choi, Nia; Majumdar, Satyajit | Social entrepreneurship as an essentially contested concept: Opening a new avenue for systematic future research | Journal of Business Venturing | 2014 | 231 |
Parkinson, Caroline; Howorth, Carole | The language of social entrepreneurs | Entrepreneurship and Regional Development | 2008 | 231 |
Morris, Michael H.; Webb, Justin W.; Franklin, Rebecca J | Understanding the Manifestation of Entrepreneurial Orientation in the Nonprofit Context | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2011 | 229 |
Calic, Goran; Mosakowski, Elaine | Kicking Off Social Entrepreneurship: How A Sustainability Orientation Influences Crowdfunding Success | Journal of Management Studies | 2016 | 227 |
Littlewood, David; Holt, Diane | Social Entrepreneurship in South Africa: Exploring the Influence of Environment | Business & Society | 2018 | 224 |
Weerawardena, Jay; McDonald, Robert E.; Mort, Gillian Sullivan | Sustainability of nonprofit organizations: An empirical investigation | Journal of World Business | 2010 | 219 |
Renko, Maija | Early Challenges of Nascent Social Entrepreneurs | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2013 | 218 |
Townsend, David M.; Hart, Timothy A | Perceived institutional ambiguity and the choice of organizational form in social entrepreneurial ventures | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2008 | 218 |
Estrin, Saul; Mickiewicz, Tomasz; Stephan, Ute | Entrepreneurship, Social Capital, and Institutions: Social and Commercial Entrepreneurship Across Nations | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2013 | 214 |
Jones, Robert; Latham, James; Betta, Michela | Narrative construction of the social entrepreneurial identity | International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research | 2008 | 213 |
Stephan, Ute; Uhlaner, Lorraine M.; Stride, Christopher | Institutions and social entrepreneurship: The role of institutional voids, institutional support, and institutional configurations | Journal of International Business Studies | 2015 | 213 |
Hockerts, Kai | Determinants of social entrepreneurial intentions | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2017 | 212 |
Rivera-Santos, Miguel; Holt, Diane; Littlewood, David; Kolk, Ans | Social entrepreneurship in sub-Saharan Africa | Academy of Management Perspectives | 2015 | 212 |
Estrin, Saul; Mickiewicz, Tomasz; Stephan, Ute | Human capital in social and commercial entrepreneurship | Journal of Business Venturing | 2016 | 197 |
Kraus, Sascha; Filser, Matthias; O’Dwyer, Michele; Shaw, Eleanor | Social Entrepreneurship: An exploratory citation analysis | Review of Managerial Science | 2014 | 196 |
Mair, Johanna; Schoen, Oliver | Successful social entrepreneurial business models in the context of developing economies: An explorative study | International Journal of Emerging Markets | 2007 | 194 |
Zahra, Shaker A.; Newey, Lance R.; Li, Yong | On the frontiers: The implications of social entrepreneurship for international entrepreneurship | Entrepreneurship theory and practice | 2014 | 194 |
Miller, Toyah L.; Grimes, Matthew G.; McMullen, Jeffery S.; Vogus, Timothy J | Venturing for Others with Heart and Head: How Compassion Encourages Social Entrepreneurship | Academy of Management Review | 2012 | 193 |
Hall, Jeremy; Matos, Stelvia; Sheehan, Lorn; Silvestre, Bruno | Entrepreneurship and Innovation at the Base of the Pyramid: A Recipe for Inclusive Growth or Social Exclusion? | Journal of Management Studies | 2012 | 192 |
Wilson, Fiona; Post, James E | Business models for people, planet (& profits): exploring the phenomena of social business, a market-based approach to social value creation | Small Business Economics | 2013 | 192 |
Seelos, Christian; Mair, Johanna; Battilana, Julie; Dacin, M. Tina | The embeddedness of social entrepreneurship: Understanding variation across local communities | Communities and organizations | 2011 | 190 |
Sud, Mukesh; VanSandt, Craig V.; Baugous, Amanda M | Social Entrepreneurship: The Role of Institutions | Journal of Business Ethics | 2009 | 189 |
Felício, J. Augusto; Martins Gonçalves, Helena; da Conceição Gonçalves, Vítor | Social value and organizational performance in non-profit social organizations: Social entrepreneurship, leadership, and socioeconomic context effects | Journal of Business Research | 2013 | 188 |
Mair, J.; Marti, I | Social entrepreneurship research: A source of explanation, prediction, and delight | Journal of World Business | 2006 | 187 |
Meyskens, Moriah; Robb-Post, Colleen; Stamp, Jeffrey A.; Carsrud, Alan L.; Reynolds, Paul D | Social Ventures from a Resource-Based Perspective: An Exploratory Study Assessing Global Ashoka Fellows | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2010 | 187 |
Phillips, Wendy; Lee, Hazel; Ghobadian, Abby; O’Regan, Nicholas; James, Peter | Social Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship: A Systematic Review | Group & Organization Management | 2015 | 185 |
Saebi, Tina; Foss, Nicolai J; Linder, Stefan | Social Entrepreneurship Research: Past Achievements and Future Promises | Journal of Management | 2019 | 185 |
Mair, Johanna; Battilana, Julie; Cardenas, Julian | Organizing for Society: A Typology of Social Entrepreneuring Models | Journal of Business Ethics | 2012 | 184 |
Datta, Punita Bhatt; Gailey, Robert | Empowering Women Through Social Entrepreneurship: Case Study of a Women's Cooperative in India | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2012 | 183 |
Rey-Martí, Andrea; Ribeiro-Soriano, Domingo; Palacios-Marqués, Daniel | A bibliometric analysis of social entrepreneurship | Journal of Business Research | 2016 | 181 |
Chell, Elizabeth; Nicolopoulou, Katerina; Karataş-Özkan, Mine | Social entrepreneurship and enterprise: International and innovation perspectives | Entrepreneurship & Regional Development | 2010 | 164 |
Desa, Geoffrey | Resource Mobilization in International Social Entrepreneurship: Bricolage as a Mechanism of Institutional Transformation | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2012 | 159 |
Bull, Michael | Challenging tensions: critical, theoretical and empirical perspectives on social enterprise | International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behavior & Research | 2008 | 158 |
Smith, Brett R.; Stevens, Christopher E | Different types of social entrepreneurship: The role of geography and embeddedness on the measurement and scaling of social value | Entrepreneurship & Regional Development | 2010 | 157 |
Kistruck, Geoffrey M.; Beamish, Paul W | The Interplay of Form, Structure, and Embeddedness in Social Intrapreneurship | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2010 | 153 |
Lehner, Othmar M | Crowdfunding social ventures: a model and research agenda | Venture Capital | 2013 | 151 |
Mort, Gillian Sullivan; Weerawardena, Jay; Carnegie, Kashonia | Social entrepreneurship: towards conceptualisation | International Journal of Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Marketing | 2003 | 150 |
Bradley, Steven W.; McMullen, Jeffery S.; Artz, Kendall; Simiyu, Edward M | Capital Is Not Enough: Innovation in Developing Economies | Journal of Management Studies | 2012 | 142 |
Lumpkin, G. T.; Moss, Todd W.; Gras, David M.; Kato, Shoko; Amezcua, Alejandro S | Entrepreneurial processes in social contexts: how are they different, if at all? | Small Business Economics | 2013 | 138 |
Austin, James E | Three avenues for social entrepreneurship research | Social entrepreneurship | 2006 | 137 |
Shaw, Eleanor; de Bruin, Anne | Reconsidering capitalism: the promise of social innovation and social entrepreneurship? | International Small Business Journal | 2013 | 137 |
Perrini, Francesco; Vurro, Clodia; Costanzo, Laura A | A process-based view of social entrepreneurship: From opportunity identification to scaling-up social change in the case of San Patrignano | Entrepreneurship & Regional Development | 2010 | 135 |
Moore, Michele-Lee; Westley, Frances | Surmountable Chasms: Networks and Social Innovation for Resilient Systems | Ecology and Society | 2011 | 134 |
Desa, Geoffrey; Basu, Sandip | Optimization or Bricolage? Overcoming Resource Constraints in Global Social Entrepreneurship | Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal | 2013 | 132 |
Nicholls, Alex | Institutionalizing social entrepreneurship in regulatory space: Reporting and disclosure by community interest companies | Accounting Organizations and Society | 2010 | 130 |
Dempsey, Sarah E.; Sanders, Matthew L | Meaningful work? Nonprofit marketization and work/life imbalance in popular autobiographies of social entrepreneurship | Organization | 2010 | 128 |
Dees, J | A Tale of Two Cultures: Charity, Problem Solving, and the Future of Social Entrepreneurship | Journal of Business Ethics | 2012 | 124 |
Ruebottom, Trish | The microstructures of rhetorical strategy in social entrepreneurship: Building legitimacy through heroes and villains | Journal of Business Venturing | 2013 | 124 |
Hayhurst, Lyndsay M. C | The ‘Girl Effect’ and martial arts: social entrepreneurship and sport, gender and development in Uganda | Gender, Place & Culture | 2014 | 120 |
Germak, Andrew J.; Robinson, Jeffrey A | Exploring the Motivation of Nascent Social Entrepreneurs | Journal of Social Entrepreneurship | 2014 | 119 |
Hill, T. L.; Kothari, Tanvi H.; Shea, Matthew | Patterns of Meaning in the Social Entrepreneurship Literature: A Research Platform | Journal of Social Entrepreneurship | 2010 | 111 |
Dorado, Silvia; Ventresca, Marc J | Crescive entrepreneurship in complex social problems: Institutional conditions for entrepreneurial engagement | Journal of Business Venturing | 2013 | 109 |
Stevens, Robin; Moray, Nathalie; Bruneel, Johan | The Social and Economic Mission of Social Enterprises: Dimensions, Measurement, Validation, and Relation | Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice | 2015 | 106 |
Appendix C: Initial political philosophy keywords
Our initial analysis also included a template of moral philosophy keywords based on Reidenbach and Robin’s normative philosophy scale (Reidenbach and Robin, 1988, 1990). We found however that ethical philosophies themes were quite well covered by our political philosophy template. For example, ethical concern of justice matches egalitarianism, relativist questions are discussed within communitarianism and multiculturalism, deontology may appear through notions of contracts, utilitarianism is both a political and moral philosophy, and egoism/altruism is addressed through ethics of care.
Reidenbach, R. E., & Robin, D. P., (1988). Some initial steps toward improving the measurement of ethical evaluations of marketing activities. Journal of Business Ethics, 7(11), 871–879.
Reidenbach, R. E., & Robin, D. P., (1990). Toward the development of a multidimensional scale for improving evaluations of business ethics. Journal of business ethics, 9(8), 639–653.
Philosophy | Key ideas | Keywords |
---|---|---|
Utilitarianism | Maximization of welfare | welfare, utility, maximization, preferences, interests, value |
Liberal egalitarianism | Primary goods | primary goods, liberty, opportunity, income, wealth, self-respect, power, equal rights, basic rights, equality of opportunity, civil rights, political rights, basic liberties, fair share, basic income, equal freedom |
Least favoured | least favoured, disadvantaged, disabled | |
Libertarianism | Absolute property rights | property, property rights, property ownership, absolute property, material welfare, self-ownership |
Mutual advantage and chosen exchanges | mutual advantage, contract, convention, social contract, rational choice, bargaining power, cooperation, freeriding | |
Liberty | liberty, freedom | |
Marxism | Alienation and exploitation of workers | alienation, exploitation, socialization of the means of production, class conflict, oppression, revolution |
Communitarianism | Culture and group identity | culture, tradition, common good, communitarian, shared practices, shared experiences, shared culture, shared identity, shared goal, solidarity, identity, way of life |
Citizenship theory | Virtue and citizens behaviour | civic, civic virtue, citizenship, voice, empowerment, responsibility, public debate, deliberation, deliberative democracy, civility, civil society, republican |
Multiculturalism | Minority cultures | diversity, cultural diversity, cultural pluralism, recognition, exclusion, excluded, marginalization, marginalized, assimilation, integration, minority group, minorities, stigmatization, stigmatized, indigenous peoples, national minorities, immigrants, ethnocultural groups, ethnoreligious groups, refugees |
Feminism | Gender equality | male biased, sexual discrimination, sexual inequalities, gender-biased, sex discrimination, sexual discrimination, sex equality, domination, dominance, women’s subordination, sexist, sexism, oppression, family, private sphere, domestic, women |
Feminist ethic | ethic of care, care theory, feminine ethic, feminist ethic, caregiver, empathy |
Appendix D: Final political philosophy keywords*
Philosophy | Theme | Keywords |
---|---|---|
Utilitarianism | Social welfare | public welfare | total welfare | global welfare | total utilit* | public utilit* | global utilit* | wellbeing | well-being | life satisfaction | preferences satisfaction |
Maximization | maximiz* | maximis* | |
Efficiency | efficient |inefficient |cost*benefit* | avoid* cost* | |
Liberal Equality | Basic rights | primary good* |basic right* |basic good* |equal* right* | equal* opportunity | political right* | civil right* |basic libert* | fair share | basic income |equal* freedom | basic need* | capability approach | capabilities | empower* |
Least favoured | least favour*|least favor*| disadvantag* | disab* | |
Libertarianism | Mutual advantage | win–win | mutual advantage| bargaining power | social contract |
Maximize freedom | |maximi* libert* | maximi* freedom | |
Property rights | private property | private ownership |property right* | |
Marixsm | Marxism | alienat* | exploit* worker | exploit* employee*| socializ* mean production | class* conflict* | oppress* | revolution | marxi* | bourgeois |
Communitarianism | Communitarianism | common good | communitarian | share* practice* | share* experience* | share* culture | share* identity | share* goal* | common practice* | common experience* | common culture | common identit*| common goal* | collective practice* | collective experience* | collective culture | collective identit* | collective goal* |solidarity | way of life |
Citizenship Theory | Civic | civic | civic virtue | citizenship | civility | civil society | engagement | commitment | involvment |
Democracy | | deliberati* | deliberative democracy | public debate | democra* | participatory | participation | |
Multiculturalism | Cultural Groups | indigenous | indigenous peoples | national minorities | immigrant* | migrant* | ethnocultural group* | ethnoreligious group* | refugee* | ethnic* minorit* |
Cultural Diversity | cultural diversity | cultural pluralism | cultural recognition | cultural* exlus* | cultural* marginaliz* | cultural assimilation | cultural integration | minority group* | minorities | cultural* stigmatiz*| cultural* stigmatis* | multicultural* | |
Feminism | Feminism | feminis* |
Ethics of Care | ethic* care | care theor* | feminine ethic* | feminist ethic | |
Empathy | empat* | |
Gender equality | male bias* | male dominat* | men dominat* | sex* discrimination* | sex**equalit* | gender-bias* | gender *equalit* | gender discrimination* | gender dominat* | gender oppression | wom*n* subordination | wom*n* right* | wom*n* discrimination | wom*n* oppression | sexis* | gender |
* The pipe ‘|’ represents the Boolean operator OR and the wild card ‘*’ represents multiple missing characters.
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Ranville, A., Barros, M. Towards Normative Theories of Social Entrepreneurship. A Review of the Top Publications of the Field. J Bus Ethics 180, 407–438 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-021-04867-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10551-021-04867-4