Saving the world through business – how do social entrepreneurs juggle their societal agenda and realities of business? A discursive approach

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School of Business | Master's thesis
Ask about the availability of the thesis by sending email to the Aalto University Learning Centre oppimiskeskus@aalto.fi

Date

2016

Major/Subject

Mcode

Degree programme

Management and International Business (MIB)

Language

en

Pages

59

Series

Abstract

The purpose of my research is to explore the discourses social entrepreneurs use to present and rationalize their operation, and how they discursively try to balance between the ‘social’ and the business. Social entrepreneurs and enterprises lack a clear definition, but have established a distinctive group of actors who are addressing many kinds of social and environmental issues through market approaches (Dempsey & Sanders, 2010; Douglas & Grant, 2014). My research is born out of interest in those actors and their understanding of their position in society and business. The concept of a business whose primary goal is to advance a societal agenda, rather than to accumulate wealth, also strikes a nerve in the discussion between business and politics. Some researchers argue that social enterprises are by their very nature political (Cho, 2006). This study explores the discussion around the role of business and social enterprises in society through a critical understanding of predominant corporate social responsibility and sustainability discourses. I strive to understand how social enterprises might be blurring the line between private economic activities and public political activities, thus contributing to creating arenas that amplify neoliberal voices (Shamir, 2008; Fougére & Solitander, 2009). One of the corner stones for this research is the approach that discourses are not only social texts that mirror reality but that social reality is discursively constructed – how language can actively shape social reality and affect and even limit our thinking (Alvesson & Kärreman, 2000). Many discourse analyses are only descriptive. However, through a critical approach one can put a particular object of study in a wider cultural, economic and political context (Alvesson & Deetz, 2000). What the social entrepreneurs say is also always ‘said’ against a background of what is 'unsaid’, but taken as a given (Fairclough, 2003). In the discourses found the choice of capitalist modus operandi is left ‘unsaid’ and the choice of societal agenda is veiled as a matter of mere personal affinities amplified by contemporary calls for meaningful work (Dempsey & Sanders, 2010). Operating on a level of the private and the personal, the discourses elude recognition of their inherent political nature (Cho, 2006). The discourses also encourage the entrepreneurs to see social issues as business opportunities, contributing to marketization of social issues and ‘politics via markets’ (Shamir, 2008).

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Thesis advisor

Tienari, Janne

Keywords

social enterprise, social entrepreneurship, discourse analysis, marketization, politics via markets

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