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El. knyga: Social Entrepreneurship and Enterprises in Economic and Social Development

Edited by (Associate Professor, School of Business, SUNY Albany), Edited by (Associate Professor, School of Social Welfare, SUNY Albany), Edited by (Dean Emeritus & Professor, School of Social Welfare, SUNY Albany)
  • Formatas: 352 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Aug-2020
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780197518304
  • Formatas: 352 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Aug-2020
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780197518304

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Microlending programs for low-income microentrepreneurs have become a global priority since the development of the Grameen Bank in 1976 and the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations in 2015. Inspired to create their own microlending program, the deans of the schools of social welfare and business at the University at Albany were aided by the university's Small Business Development Center and the State Employees Federal Credit Union. This led to the creation of the Small Enterprise Economic Development (SEED) program. Following this, new faculty were hired in the School of Social Welfare and the School of Business to address social entrepreneurship and lead these initiatives. The impetus for this book emerged from these developments including three forums in which national and international contributors participated in workshops, panels, and chapters for this book. These forums were co-organized by the School of Social Welfare, the School of Business, and a new Center for the Advancement & Understanding of Social Enterprises (CAUSE) at UAlbany.

Building on the example set by UAlbany, Social Entrepreneurship and Enterprises in Economic and Social Development explains how and why we should integrate social entrepreneurship and social enterprises with economic and social development. While this global movement varies in pace and scope, the volume features snapshots from countries and regions representing nearly all continents, including Albania, Argentina, Cuba, India, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Russian Federation, Taiwan, Tajikistan, and Tanzania.

One of the lessons is that social policies are critical for supporting social entrepreneurs since environmental, economic, and social sustainability are core goals of these initiatives. The chapters in this volume offer different contextual frames ranging from social enterprise business plans and measured entrepreneurial orientation to displacement dynamics (and how to avoid them) and the pitfalls of non-market economies. The contributing authors examine a variety of ventures and social policies to showcase how nations are supporting social enterprises as they attempt to meet human needs and achieve financial sustainability. The resulting volume provides a rationale for, and snapshots of, social enterprises and entrepreneurship in transitioning nations.

Recenzijos

From its conceptualizations to its current actualization of knowledge, values, and skills from two diverse professional fields * social work and businessthis book is practical, impactful, and one of a kind. The contributors and editors shed light on the necessity of social entrepreneurship in useful ways, and the global examples provided make this book a necessity for anyone working in these areas.Goutham Menon, PhD, MA, MBA, Dean and Professor, School of Social Work, Loyola University Chicago * This important collection of original chapters about the contribution of social entrepreneurship and social enterprise to economic and social development makes a significant contribution to the literature. The editors and contributors are to be congratulated for compiling an innovative and dynamic book which deserves to be widely consulted. * James Midgley, PhD, , Professor of the Graduate School, University of California Berkeley * Social Entrepreneurship and Enterprises in Economic and Social Development combines inclusive development, social enterprise, and social entrepreneurship into one concise volume. The contributors go into detail about the social, political, and economic issues currently troubling the field, and I think this is a useful text. * Monica Nandan, PhD, MSW, MBA, Director of Strategic Partnerships and Social Impact and Professor of Social Work and Human Services, Kennesaw State University *


Foreword, Matthew J. Grattan, James Stellar, & James A. Dias
Preface, Katharine Briar-Lawson, Paul Miesing & Blanca M. Ramos

Section I. Theoretical, Applied, and Biographical Contexts for Social Enterprises and Social Entrepreneurship
Introduction, Paul Miesing, Blanca M. Ramos, Katharine Briar-Lawson
Chapter 1: Social Enterprises as Integrative Resources, Strategies, and Models, Paul Miesing
Chapter 2: Displacement: A Typology for Social Entrepreneurs, Kelly Gross
Chapter 3: Organizational Entrepreneurial Orientation: Implications for Social Impact and Social Enterprise, William J. Wales & Vishal K. Gupta
Chapter 4: Immigrant Entrepreneurship: Economic and Social Development, Wonhyung Lee & Stephanie L. Black
Chapter 5: Sustaining and Growing Social Innovations Using Integrated Development Models: Experiences from the United States, United Kingdom, and Japan, Paul M. Weaver, Michael B. Marks, Carina Skropke,Linda Marie Hogan & Gabriella Spinelli
Chapter 6: UAlbany's Small Enterprise Economic Development (SEED) Program as an Exemplar, Wonhyung Lee, William Brigham, Stephanie Wacholder, Katherine Baker, & Bruce Stanley
Chapter 7: Failing My Way to Success, Steve Lobel

Section II. Examples from Transitioning and Market-Based Economies
Chapter 8: Focus on the Balkans: Social Enterprise in Albania, Michelle T. Hackett & Michael J. Roy
Chapter 9: Redefining Silk Roads: Social Businesses and Crafts as Approaches for Improving Women's Situations in Central Asia, Jill Urbaeva
Chapter 10: Social Entrepreneurship and Corporate Social Responsibility in the Russian Federation, Ruslan Sadyrtdinov
Chapter 11: Socio-Economic Development in India: Lessons from the Third Sector, Meera Bhat, Swapnil Barai
Eric Otenyo, Michelle Harris, & Kelly Askew
Chapter 12: Where There is no Formal Social Welfare System for an Indigenous People: Entrepreneurship, Watchmen, and the Reinvention of the Maasai Warrior, Eric Otenyo, Michelle Harris, and Kelly Askew
Chapter 13: Social Enterprise in Taiwan: Economic and Social Welfare Transition, Yijung Wu
Chapter 14: Social Entrepreneurship in Argentina: The Role of Mission-Driven Organizations on the Pathway to Inclusive Growth, Leila Mucarsel, Meera Bhat, and Blanca M. Ramos
Chapter 15: The Odd Couple: "Incomplete Socialism" and Social Enterprises in Cuba, Henry-Louis Taylor, Jr.

Section III. Toward More Integrative Social and Economic Development: Selective Barriers and Facilitators
Chapter 16: Integrating Social and Economic Development, Katharine Briar-Lawson and Mizanur R. Miah
Chapter 17: Selected Observations and Lessons Learned for 21st Century Supports for Social Entrepreneurship and Social Enterprises, Katharine Briar-Lawson, Paul Miesing, and Blanca M. Ramos

Addenda: Tables, Figures, Illustrations, and Appendices
Katharine Briar-Lawson is Professor and Dean Emeritus in the School of Social Welfare at the University at Albany. She has authored or edited over 14 books, including Globalization, Social Justice and the Helping Professions. Her research includes the human costs of unemployment and underemployment along with family centered practices and policies. She has been instrumental in the development of the interdisciplinary Small Enterprise Economic Development (SEED) program at the University at Albany. She has won international, national, and university awards for some of her work.

Paul Miesing is Founding Director of UAlbany's Center for Advancement & Understanding of Social Enterprises (CAUSE). He conducts research and training in the School of Business in various areas of Strategic Management, including environmental sustainability, social entrepreneurship, globalization issues, and corporate governance. He has previously been Fulbright Lecturer at Fudan University in Shanghai,

Visiting Professor at the Indian Institute of Management in Calcutta, and Visiting Faculty at La Universidad Del Salvador in Buenos Aires. In 2013, he was the recipient of two of UAlbany's inaugural Exemplary Community Engagement Awards.



Blanca M. Ramos is Associate Professor in the School of Social Welfare with a joint appointment in the Department of Latin American and Caribbean Studies at the University at Albany. Ramos is a recognized publicly-engaged community leader and scholar. Her research interests focus on socioeconomically disadvantaged groups, particularly immigrants and Latin American subgroups in the US. She has a long history of working internationally in collaborative and research projects, especially in Sweden, Spain, Mexico, Costa Rica, Cuba, Puerto Rico and Peru.