UNSEEN HEROES: HOW SOCIAL ENTERPRISES FACILITATE LEGITIMATION OF MARGINALIZED GROUPS

被引:0
|
作者
Spanuth, Alina [1 ]
Urbano, David [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Entrepreneurship & Management, Barcelona, Spain
[2] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Entrepreneurship, Barcelona, Spain
[3] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
关键词
GRAND CHALLENGES; IDENTITY; ENTREPRENEURSHIP; STRATEGIES; WORK; INTERSECTIONALITY; PERSPECTIVE; KATHMANDU; RIGOR;
D O I
10.5465/amp.2023.0095
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Breaking the cycle of marginalization that affects many people is one of today's biggest societal challenges, and social enterprises can be a crucial support actor in achieving inclusion. This ethnographically informed qualitative study of a waste management social enterprise in Nepal is motivated by the question, "How do social enterprises facilitate legitimation for marginalized groups in societies?" Based on rich qualitative data, we demonstrate how a Nepali-based social enterprise has contributed to the legitimation process for informal waste workers by employing the 3R strategies of reconditioning, reframing, and representing. Our findings show the importance of capacity-building, rhetoric, and collective action in the legitimation process for marginalized groups, and how these address the underlying attributes of marginalization. We consider conditional legitimacy as a preliminary outcome of the process, which deserves stronger attention in legitimacy theory. The insights gained hold global relevance, offering implications for practitioners to improve the circumstances of marginalized groups worldwide.
引用
收藏
页码:94 / 124
页数:31
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Legitimation of Social Enterprises as Hybrid Organizations
    Park, Ji-Hoon
    Bae, Zong-Tae
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2020, 12 (18)
  • [2] How dynamic capabilities facilitate the survivability of social enterprises: A qualitative analysis of sensing and seizing capacities
    Ince, Inan
    Hahn, Ruediger
    JOURNAL OF SMALL BUSINESS MANAGEMENT, 2020, 58 (06) : 1256 - 1290
  • [3] How Social Enterprises Nurture Empowerment: A Grounded Theoretical Model of Social Change
    Pareja-Cano, Braulio
    Valor, Carmen
    Benito, Arturo
    JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP, 2023, 14 (01) : 29 - 49
  • [4] How Social Entrepreneurs Facilitate the Adoption of New Industry Practices
    Waldron, Theodore L.
    Fisher, Greg
    Pfarrer, Michael
    JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES, 2016, 53 (05) : 821 - 845
  • [5] How social networks facilitate collective responses to organizational paradoxes
    Keller, Joshua
    Wong, Sze-Sze
    Liou, Shyhnan
    HUMAN RELATIONS, 2020, 73 (03) : 401 - 428
  • [6] An Organizational Approach to Understanding How Social Enterprises Address Health Inequities: A Scoping Review
    Suchowerska, Roksolana
    Barraket, Jo
    Qian, Joanne
    Mason, Chris
    Farmer, Jane
    Carey, Gemma
    Campbell, Perri
    Joyce, Andrew
    JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP, 2020, 11 (03) : 257 - 281
  • [7] Social Enterprise and the Capability Approach: Exploring How Social Enterprises Are Humanizing Business
    Weaver, Rasheda L.
    JOURNAL OF NONPROFIT & PUBLIC SECTOR MARKETING, 2020, 32 (05) : 427 - 452
  • [8] Internal oriented resources and social enterprises' performance: How can social enterprises help themselves before helping others?
    Cheah, Jeffrey
    Amran, Azlan
    Yahya, Sofri
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2019, 211 : 607 - 619
  • [9] How social enterprises gain cognitive legitimacy in the post-pandemic period? Social welfare logic and digital transformation
    Aisaiti, Gulizhaer
    Liang, Ling
    Liu, Luhao
    Xie, Jiaping
    Zhang, Tingting
    INDUSTRIAL MANAGEMENT & DATA SYSTEMS, 2021, 121 (12) : 2697 - 2721
  • [10] Is contact among social class groups associated with legitimation of inequality? An examination across 28 countries
    Salfate, Salvador Vargas
    Stern, Chadly
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 63 (02) : 572 - 590