Questioning the legitimacy of Social Enterprises through Gramscian and Bourdieusian perspectives: the case of British Social Enterprises.

Drawing on data from six social enterprises in the UK, this paper demonstrates that social enterprises negotiate their legitimacy borrowing from the state, the corporation and the service logics. The paper illustrates the existential crises of legitimacy as experienced in the social enterprise secto...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nicolopoulou, Katerina (Author), Lucas, Iain (Author), Tatli, Ahu (Author), Karatas-Ozkan, Mine (Author), Costanzo, Laura A. (Author), Özbilgin, Mustafa (Author), Manville, Graham (Author)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2015-01-01.
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Summary:Drawing on data from six social enterprises in the UK, this paper demonstrates that social enterprises negotiate their legitimacy borrowing from the state, the corporation and the service logics. The paper illustrates the existential crises of legitimacy as experienced in the social enterprise sector. The utility of a principled ethical approach is discussed as a way forward. The paper also outlines challenges that social enterprises face when adopting an ethical approach. Theoretical tools of Gramsci and Bourdieu are mobilized in the paper in order to render visible the often implicit and questioned structures of hegemonic power that shape the habitus of legitimacy in social enterprises.