Relational perspective on hybrid organizing across the micro, meso, and macro level contexts of social entrepreneurship
dc.contributor.advisor
Woodward, Richard
dc.contributor.advisor
Ivory, Sarah
dc.contributor.author
Koehne, Florian
dc.contributor.sponsor
Innovate UK
en
dc.date.accessioned
2022-04-29T13:11:13Z
dc.date.available
2022-04-29T13:11:13Z
dc.date.issued
2022-04-28
dc.description.abstract
This thesis advances the theoretical and empirical understanding of hybrid organizing
in the field of social entrepreneurship across micro, meso, and macro-level contexts.
On the micro-level, it concentrates on the individual social entrepreneur as a hybrid
social actor. On the meso-level, it focuses on social enterprises as hybrid
organizations. On the macro-level, it is concerned with social entrepreneurship as a
hybridizing mechanism across different institutional contexts. Three research papers
are presented in this thesis, two qualitative papers and one conceptual paper. While
each paper contributes to existing research on hybrid organizing for one particular
level, the overall thesis provides critical implications for a relational, cross-level
understanding of hybrid organizing and the Bourdieusian theory it applies.
Paper 1 addresses the micro-level of hybrid organizing and theorizes on the
potentials and perils of prosocial power in the context of transnational social
entrepreneurs who leverage a multi-spatial embeddedness for their operations in
vulnerable places. The paper reveals how prosocial power is embodied by
transnational social entrepreneurs, as well as why and how the prosocial intentions
and behaviors of these hybrid entrepreneurs can result in positive and negative
prosocial impacts on the disadvantaged others they seek to support.
Paper 2 addresses the meso-level of hybrid organizing from an institutional
logics perspective and theorizes on the re-enchantment of collegiality as a previously
marginalized polycratic governance concept. It discusses the potential of collegiality
for the intra-organizational governance of hybrid enterprises as post-bureaucratic
organizations for which alternative governance approaches with a non-bureaucratic
logic remain largely absent or underdeveloped.
Paper 3 applies institutional theory and addresses the macro-level of hybrid
organizing by introducing an institutional nexus perspective of social entrepreneurship
that links the existing institutional void and institutional support perspectives. It
conceptualizes the critical influence of different migration directions and human
capital endowments that exist among transnational social entrepreneurs. The paper
presents a contextualized framework that expands the limited theoretical
development in contemporary transnational entrepreneurship research for a better
understanding of context-spanning hybridity.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/38912
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/2164
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.subject
social enterprises
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dc.subject
hybrid organizing
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dc.subject
transnational social entrepreneurs
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dc.subject
hybrid social actors
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dc.subject
polycratic governance models
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dc.subject
Pierre Bourdieu
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dc.title
Relational perspective on hybrid organizing across the micro, meso, and macro level contexts of social entrepreneurship
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dc.title.alternative
A relational perspective on hybrid organizing across the micro, meso, and macro-level contexts of social entrepreneurship
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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