Theory of Social Enterprise and Pluralism: Social Movements, Solidarity Economy, and Global South

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Philippe Eynaud, Jean-Louis Laville, Luciane dos Santos, Swati Banerjee, Flor Avelino, Lars Hulgård
Routledge, May 20, 2019 - Business & Economics - 262 pages

In the past decades, social enterprise has been an emerging field of research. Its main frameworks have been provided by Occidental approaches. Mainly based on an organizational vision, they give little or no room to questions such as gender, race, colonialism, class, power relations and intertwined forms of inequality. However, a wide range of worldwide hidden, popular initiatives can be considered as another form of social enterprises based on solidarity, re-embedding the economy as well as broadening the political scope. This has been shown in a previous book: Civil Society, the Third Sector, and Social Enterprise: Governance and Democracy.

Thus, to be more than a fashion or a fictitious panacea, the concept of social enterprise needs to be debated. Southern realities cannot be only understood through imported categories and outside modeled guidelines. This book engages a multicontinental and pluridisciplinary discussion in order to provide a pluralist theory of social enterprise. The book will be of interest to researchers, academics and students in the fields of social entrepreneurship, social innovation, development studies, management studies and social work.

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Contents

Authors Biographies
Is It Possible to Decolonise This Concept?
Rethinking Social Enterprise Through Philanthropic and Democratic
A CrossDisciplinary and International Perspective About Social Enterprise
Reconfiguring the Social and Solidarity Economy in a DanishNordic
The Domestic Domain Within a PostColonial Feminist Reading of Social
Reimagining the Social Enterprise Through Grassroots Social Innovations
Limits and Possibilities in Brazil
Social Enterprise Between Crime Economy and Democratic Transformation
Why Is SolidarityType Social Enterprise Invisible in Portugal?
A MultiActor
Deepening the Theoretical and Critical Debate Through NorthSouth
Index
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About the author (2019)

Philippe Eynaud is full professor at Sorbonne Business School, University Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne, and a researcher in Gregor.

Jean-Louis Laville is professor at the Conservatoire national des arts et métiers (Cnam, Paris) and director of the research programme: "Plural democracy and economy" at Collège d’études mondiales—FMSH, Paris.

Luciane Lucas dos Santos is senior researcher at the Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra, integrating and co-coordinating the Research Group on Democracy, Citizenship and Law (DECIDe).

Swati Banerjee is professor and chairperson at the Centre for Livelihoods and Social Innovation, School of Social Work, Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai, and coordinator, Right Livelihood College, RLC—TISS, one of the nine RLC campuses across the globe.

Flor Avelino is assistant professor and senior researcher in the politics of sustainability transitions and social innovation at the Dutch Research Institute for Transitions (DRIFT, Erasmus University of Rotterdam, www.drift.eur.nl/).

Lars Hulgård is full professor of social entrepreneurship, Roskilde University, and permanent visiting professor at Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai.