Social role of entrepreneurship in Zimbabwe.

This paper aims to present a theoretical framework for evaluating the logic behind social entrepreneurship through linking its possible causal, motivational, behavioral and directive dimensions in Zimbabwe. The paper develops various theoretical and empirical motivations for social entrepreneurs whe...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nhuta, Stephen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Journals of Multidisciplinary Research Academy 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijmra.us/ijpssvolume_november2012.php
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1557
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1779905635854319616
author Nhuta, Stephen
author_facet Nhuta, Stephen
author_sort Nhuta, Stephen
collection DSpace
description This paper aims to present a theoretical framework for evaluating the logic behind social entrepreneurship through linking its possible causal, motivational, behavioral and directive dimensions in Zimbabwe. The paper develops various theoretical and empirical motivations for social entrepreneurs when the state and the businesses fail to address human needs. The paper addresses the following questions; Why do we need social entrepreneurs?. What areas are addressed by social entrepreneurs? How do social entrepreneurs create value?. Social entrepreneurship may be considered as a response to either business failure, state failure, or both. The role of social entrepreneurs is salient not only when such failures occur in the developing world but also the developed world. Whereas traditional entrepreneurs occasionally formulate needs to which they proffer solutions, social entrepreneurs address existing societal needs to which they provide workable solutions. The point of dispute is whether being a non profit entity violates Schumpeter's assumptions about the designated role of an entrepreneur, who is depicted primarily as an economic actor (Schumpeter, 1947). I refer to Boschee and McClurg (2003) they emphatically state that the ultimate goal of independence for social entrepreneurs requires generating enough revenue to cover operations. One would argue that the social entrepreneurs' focus on improving society is also a form of creative destruction. Since they aim for social betterment, they use their creativity to help destroy barriers to well being such as disillusionment, disenfranchisement and disorganization among those in grim social situations.
format Article
id ir-11408-1557
institution My University
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher International Journals of Multidisciplinary Research Academy
record_format dspace
spelling ir-11408-15572022-06-27T13:49:06Z Social role of entrepreneurship in Zimbabwe. Nhuta, Stephen Social Entrepreneurship, Innovation, Economic Development, Social Imbalance, Value creation This paper aims to present a theoretical framework for evaluating the logic behind social entrepreneurship through linking its possible causal, motivational, behavioral and directive dimensions in Zimbabwe. The paper develops various theoretical and empirical motivations for social entrepreneurs when the state and the businesses fail to address human needs. The paper addresses the following questions; Why do we need social entrepreneurs?. What areas are addressed by social entrepreneurs? How do social entrepreneurs create value?. Social entrepreneurship may be considered as a response to either business failure, state failure, or both. The role of social entrepreneurs is salient not only when such failures occur in the developing world but also the developed world. Whereas traditional entrepreneurs occasionally formulate needs to which they proffer solutions, social entrepreneurs address existing societal needs to which they provide workable solutions. The point of dispute is whether being a non profit entity violates Schumpeter's assumptions about the designated role of an entrepreneur, who is depicted primarily as an economic actor (Schumpeter, 1947). I refer to Boschee and McClurg (2003) they emphatically state that the ultimate goal of independence for social entrepreneurs requires generating enough revenue to cover operations. One would argue that the social entrepreneurs' focus on improving society is also a form of creative destruction. Since they aim for social betterment, they use their creativity to help destroy barriers to well being such as disillusionment, disenfranchisement and disorganization among those in grim social situations. 2016-06-13T07:39:47Z 2016-06-13T07:39:47Z 2012 Article 2249-5894 http://www.ijmra.us/ijpssvolume_november2012.php http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1557 en International Journal of Physical and Social Sciences;Vol.2, No. 11; p.16-34 open International Journals of Multidisciplinary Research Academy
spellingShingle Social Entrepreneurship, Innovation, Economic Development, Social Imbalance, Value creation
Nhuta, Stephen
Social role of entrepreneurship in Zimbabwe.
title Social role of entrepreneurship in Zimbabwe.
title_full Social role of entrepreneurship in Zimbabwe.
title_fullStr Social role of entrepreneurship in Zimbabwe.
title_full_unstemmed Social role of entrepreneurship in Zimbabwe.
title_short Social role of entrepreneurship in Zimbabwe.
title_sort social role of entrepreneurship in zimbabwe.
topic Social Entrepreneurship, Innovation, Economic Development, Social Imbalance, Value creation
url http://www.ijmra.us/ijpssvolume_november2012.php
http://hdl.handle.net/11408/1557
work_keys_str_mv AT nhutastephen socialroleofentrepreneurshipinzimbabwe