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Policy Design and Achieving Social Outcomes: A Comparative Analysis of Social Enterprise Policy

Authors
Choi, DonweBerry Frances StokesGhadimi Adela
Issue Date
May-2020
Publisher
WILEY
Citation
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REVIEW, v.80, no.3, pp.494 - 505
Indexed
SCIE
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REVIEW
Volume
80
Number
3
Start Page
494
End Page
505
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/189296
DOI
10.1111/puar.13111
ISSN
0033-3352
Abstract
This article compares American, British, and Korean social enterprise policies to explore how government policy design shapes social enterprises and how "social benefit" and "public value" are defined. A social enterprise is defined as the legally structured organizational pursuit of blending social purpose and economic profit through business activities, and examples from each country are presented. Applying Bozeman's publicness theory, the authors demonstrate the wide range of roles that governments play in shaping social enterprises' ownership, funding, and control across the three countries using regulations, subsidies, and procurement policies. These roles may affect the impact of social enterprises in society. The case studies show that the U.S. approach to social enterprise policy is heavily market oriented, while the United Kingdom is in the middle of the market-to-publicness continuum, and South Korea is much closer to the publicness (government-dominated) end of the continuum.
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