The Concept of Social Entrepreneurship as a Form of Social Motives and Career Paths according to a Psychosocial Perspective

Authors

  • Yulianah Perbanas Institute

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56403/nejesh.v2i1.87

Keywords:

Social entrepreneurship, social motives, career identity

Abstract

The notion of social entrepreneurship can offer answers to social problems prevalent in today's society, particularly in entrepreneurship and social innovation. The idea of social entrepreneurship is a brand-new and interesting research area that piques the interest of the vast majority of scholars currently working in the field. In the context of social entrepreneurship, this review aims to isolate pertinent research issues in social psychology. This investigation takes a qualitative approach and makes use of descriptive research tools. Due to the many investigative research, individual qualities, societal motivations, and a specific vocational identity were some of the possible psychosocial elements discovered necessary for this sort of entrepreneurship. In addition, various perspectives on society, organizational goals, and psychosocial aspects of organizational behaviour were incorporated.

References

Alvord, S.H., Brown, I.D., & Letts, C.W. (2004). Social Entrepreneurship and Societal Transformation: An Exploratory Study. The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 40(3), 260-282.

Bargsted, M., Picon, M., Salazar, A., & Rojas, Y. (2013). Psychosocial characterization of social entrepreneurs: A comparative study. Journal of social entrepreneurship, 4(3), 331-346.

Batson, C. D., Van Lange, P. A., Ahmad, N., Lishner, D. A., Hogg, M. A., & Cooper, J. (2007). Altruism and helping behaviour. In The Sage handbook of social psychology (pp. 241-258). London, UK: Sage.

Bosman, N., & Livie, J. (2010). Global Entrepreneurship Monitor 2009 Executive Report.

Cohen, B., Smith, B., & Mitchell, R. (2008). Toward a sustainable conceptualization of dependent variables in entrepreneurship research. Business Strategy and the Environment, 17(2), 107-119.

Cukier, W., Trenholm, S., Carl, D., & Gekas, G. (2011). Social entrepreneurship: A content analysis. Journal of Strategic Innovation and Sustainability, 7(1), 99-119.

Dees, J. G. (1998). Enterprising nonprofits: What do you do when traditional sources of funding fall short? Harvard business review, 76(1), 55-67.

Drayton, B. (2006). Everyone a changemaker: Social entrepreneurship's ultimate goal. Innovations, 1(1), 80-96.

Firdaus, N. (2014). Pengentasan kemiskinan melalui pendekatan kewirausahaan sosial. Jurnal ekonomi dan Pembangunan, 22(1), 55-67.

Hoffman, B. (2015). Motivation for learning and performance. Academic Press.

Hulgård, L. (2010). Discourses of social entrepreneurship–Variations of the same theme. EMES European Research Network, 10(1), 2-21.

Kleinginna Jr, P. R., & Kleinginna, A. M. (1981). A categorized list of motivation definitions, with a suggestion for a consensual definition. Motivation and Emotion, 5(3), 263-291.

Mursidi, A., Marhayani, D. A., Zulfahita, S., Susanto, H., Setyowati, R., & Wahyuni, R. (2020). Kewirausahaan Sosial. Penerbit Lakeisha.

Ormiston, J., & Seymour, R. (2011). Understanding value creation in social entrepreneurship: The importance of aligning mission, strategy and impact measurement. Journal of social entrepreneurship, 2(2), 125-150.

Peredo, A. M., & McLean, M. (2006). Social entrepreneurship: A critical review of the concept. Journal of world business, 41(1), 56-65.

Perrini, F. (Ed.). (2006). The new social entrepreneurship: what awaits social entrepreneurial ventures? Edward Elgar Publishing.

Schein, E. H. (1990). Career anchors and job/role planning: The links between career pathing and career development.

Smith, I. H., & Woodworth, W. P. (2012). Developing social entrepreneurs and social innovators: A social identity and self-efficacy approach. Academy of Management Learning & Education, 11(3), 390-407.

Waddock, S. A., & Post, J. E. (1991). Social entrepreneurs and catalytic change. Public administration review, 393-401.

Downloads

Published

2023-03-30

How to Cite

Yulianah. (2023). The Concept of Social Entrepreneurship as a Form of Social Motives and Career Paths according to a Psychosocial Perspective. Neo Journal of Economy and Social Humanities, 2(1), 40–45. https://doi.org/10.56403/nejesh.v2i1.87