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The nascent ecology of social enterprise

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Robson, P 
Hagedoorn, J 
Sugar, K 

Abstract

Employing population ecology theory, we examine social enterprise population emergence in the United Kingdom after 2005 when a new organizational form for social enterprise was established. Our density dependence analysis of nearly seven thousand Community Interest Companies finds that survival is positively influenced by age and population densities of both other social enterprises and commercial organizations. Two specific patterns in population emergence are identified: social enterprise survival is more likely influenced by industry than age, a finding that we label the liability of specificity, and their survival benefits from the population density of commercial organizations but not nonprofit organizations, a finding that we label the hybrid-commercial benefit. Our research identifies the liability of specificity as a new concept in population ecology theory and the hybrid-commercial benefit as a contextual influence on social enterprise survival.

Description

Funder: Edmond de Rothschild Foundations


Funder: Isaac Newton Trust; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004815

Keywords

Population ecology, Density dependence, Social enterprise, Survival, Community interest companies

Journal Title

Small Business Economics: an international journal

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0921-898X
1573-0913

Volume Title

58

Publisher

Springer