Social Enterprises with the Poor as Primary Stakeholders: Responding to State and Market Failures in the South

This paper presents a framework for understanding how social enterprises engage the poor and address poverty, a pressing global problem of the 21st century. It introduces social enterprises with the poor as primary stakeholders or SEPPS as a conceptual construct of a major type of social enterprise....

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Main Author: Dacanay, Marie Lisa
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2013
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/235
https://emes.net/publications/conference-papers/4th-emes-conference-emes-socent-selected-conference-papers/social-enterprises-with-the-poor-as-primary-stakeholders-responding-to-state-and-market-failures-in-the-south/
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.asog-pubs-12352022-05-06T05:57:58Z Social Enterprises with the Poor as Primary Stakeholders: Responding to State and Market Failures in the South Dacanay, Marie Lisa This paper presents a framework for understanding how social enterprises engage the poor and address poverty, a pressing global problem of the 21st century. It introduces social enterprises with the poor as primary stakeholders or SEPPS as a conceptual construct of a major type of social enterprise. SEPPS are characterized as responses to the failure of state and market institutions to serve the needs of the poor in developing countries or the South. Using case-based theory building as methodology, the paper presents three models of stakeholder engagement among social enterprises with the poor as primary stakeholders or SEPPS, namely control, collaboration and empowerment. The paper contributes to social entrepreneurship and stakeholder theory by developing propositions about the power and limitations of these three models in bringing about social inclusion and poverty reduction. While needing to be tested in a broader sample of SEPPS, these propositions are suggested to be applicable in the South or developing countries other than the Philippines where the empirical study was undertaken. In these countries, systemic poverty and inequality are exacerbated by the failure of state and market institutions to address the needs of the poor. Amidst such failure of state and market institutions in the South, the cases indicate that development institutions and solidarity markets in the North have served as critical enabling stakeholders of SEPPS. This indicates that SEPPS may be conceived as a global social enterprise model catalyzing South-North cooperation for poverty reduction. 2013-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/235 https://emes.net/publications/conference-papers/4th-emes-conference-emes-socent-selected-conference-papers/social-enterprises-with-the-poor-as-primary-stakeholders-responding-to-state-and-market-failures-in-the-south/ Ateneo School of Government Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo Business Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Business
Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics
spellingShingle Business
Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics
Dacanay, Marie Lisa
Social Enterprises with the Poor as Primary Stakeholders: Responding to State and Market Failures in the South
description This paper presents a framework for understanding how social enterprises engage the poor and address poverty, a pressing global problem of the 21st century. It introduces social enterprises with the poor as primary stakeholders or SEPPS as a conceptual construct of a major type of social enterprise. SEPPS are characterized as responses to the failure of state and market institutions to serve the needs of the poor in developing countries or the South. Using case-based theory building as methodology, the paper presents three models of stakeholder engagement among social enterprises with the poor as primary stakeholders or SEPPS, namely control, collaboration and empowerment. The paper contributes to social entrepreneurship and stakeholder theory by developing propositions about the power and limitations of these three models in bringing about social inclusion and poverty reduction. While needing to be tested in a broader sample of SEPPS, these propositions are suggested to be applicable in the South or developing countries other than the Philippines where the empirical study was undertaken. In these countries, systemic poverty and inequality are exacerbated by the failure of state and market institutions to address the needs of the poor. Amidst such failure of state and market institutions in the South, the cases indicate that development institutions and solidarity markets in the North have served as critical enabling stakeholders of SEPPS. This indicates that SEPPS may be conceived as a global social enterprise model catalyzing South-North cooperation for poverty reduction.
format text
author Dacanay, Marie Lisa
author_facet Dacanay, Marie Lisa
author_sort Dacanay, Marie Lisa
title Social Enterprises with the Poor as Primary Stakeholders: Responding to State and Market Failures in the South
title_short Social Enterprises with the Poor as Primary Stakeholders: Responding to State and Market Failures in the South
title_full Social Enterprises with the Poor as Primary Stakeholders: Responding to State and Market Failures in the South
title_fullStr Social Enterprises with the Poor as Primary Stakeholders: Responding to State and Market Failures in the South
title_full_unstemmed Social Enterprises with the Poor as Primary Stakeholders: Responding to State and Market Failures in the South
title_sort social enterprises with the poor as primary stakeholders: responding to state and market failures in the south
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2013
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/235
https://emes.net/publications/conference-papers/4th-emes-conference-emes-socent-selected-conference-papers/social-enterprises-with-the-poor-as-primary-stakeholders-responding-to-state-and-market-failures-in-the-south/
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