How social enterprises nurture empowerment: a grounded theoretical model of social change
Abstract
Our understanding of how social enterprises enable social change is still limited. Empowerment could be a valid mediating construct to explain the processes occurring between entrepreneurial practices and achievement of social goals. Based on an ethnography case study in a South African social enterprise, this study reveals the entrepreneurial practices that contribute to women’s empowerment and the power-accruing processes that provide female workers access and control over resources and a sense of individual and collective achievement that facilitates the rupture of patriarchal gender roles. This empowerment-based model contributes to explain social change processes inherent in the phenomenon of social entrepreneurship. Our understanding of how social enterprises enable social change is still limited. Empowerment could be a valid mediating construct to explain the processes occurring between entrepreneurial practices and achievement of social goals. Based on an ethnography case study in a South African social enterprise, this study reveals the entrepreneurial practices that contribute to women’s empowerment and the power-accruing processes that provide female workers access and control over resources and a sense of individual and collective achievement that facilitates the rupture of patriarchal gender roles. This empowerment-based model contributes to explain social change processes inherent in the phenomenon of social entrepreneurship.
How social enterprises nurture empowerment: a grounded theoretical model of social change
Tipo de Actividad
Artículos en revistasISSN
1942-0676Materias/ categorías / ODS
Instituto de Investigación Tecnológica (IIT)Palabras Clave
Women’s empowerment, gender equality, social entrepreneurship, social changeWomen’s empowerment, gender equality, social entrepreneurship, social change


