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SoBrief
Social Entrepreneurship

Social Entrepreneurship

Theory and Practice
by Ryszard Praszkier 2011 250 pages
3.80
20 ratings
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Key Takeaways

1. Social entrepreneurs act as systemic catalysts rather than direct-service activists

The social entrepreneur changes the performance capacity of society.

Systemic pattern change. Social entrepreneurs do not merely treat the symptoms of social ills; they alter the entire system. While social activists and charity workers provide vital direct relief, the social entrepreneur is obsessed with changing the underlying pattern across society. They seek to create a new, self-perpetuating norm that renders the old, problematic structures obsolete.

Catalytic intervention. They act as catalysts, using minimal resources to trigger self-sustaining chain reactions. By identifying leverage points, they turn passive recipients into active changemakers. For example:

  • Munir Hasan transformed math education in Bangladesh by turning it into a competitive team sport through festivals.
  • Steve Bigari restructured McDonald's employee retention by treating personal crises as training opportunities.

Durable social value. The ultimate goal is to establish a new, self-perpetuating norm. Once the catalyst is introduced, the system reorganizes itself, ensuring that the benefits accrue to society at large long after the entrepreneur has stepped away. This approach shifts the focus from dependency on external aid to internal, community-driven capability.

2. True social change requires shifting the system's underlying attractor

To bring about any change, the balance between the forces which maintain the social self-regulation at a given level has to be upset.

Force-field dynamics. Social systems naturally exist in a state of quasi-stationary equilibrium, maintained by opposing forces. Direct attempts to force change often fail because the system's homeostatic mechanisms pull it back to its original state once the external pressure is removed. This explains why many well-funded, top-down development projects collapse after the funding ends.

The attractor concept. In dynamical systems theory, an attractor represents the state toward which a system naturally drifts. To achieve permanent change, entrepreneurs must build a new, positive attractor rather than fighting the old, negative one.

  • Negative attractors include deeply ingrained distrust, apathy, and misanthropy.
  • Positive attractors are built on trust, cooperation, and mutual benefit.

Unfreezing and freezing. This process aligns with Kurt Lewin's classic three-step model of change. The entrepreneur unfreezes the old equilibrium, moves the system to a new level, and freezes the new force field to secure it against regression. By deepening the new attractor, the system naturally stabilizes at a higher level of performance.

3. Complex social systems self-organize through simple, local rules

The basic idea is that the local interactions among low-level elements, where each element adjusts to other elements, without reference to a global pattern, may lead to the emergence of highly coherent structures and behaviors on the level of the whole.

Simplicity breeds complexity. Highly complex social behaviors often emerge from surprisingly simple rules of local interaction. Just as a flock of birds coordinates its flight without a central leader, human communities can self-organize when guided by basic, intuitive principles. This bottom-up self-organization is far more resilient than top-down control.

The bubbles theory. Social change propagates through "bubbles of new" appearing in a "sea of old." Rather than trying to convert an entire population at once, entrepreneurs focus on creating highly concentrated local clusters of change.

  • These clusters form around strong local leaders who act as seeds.
  • Interconnecting these clusters allows the new behavior to spread rapidly.
  • The minority opinion survives and expands by forming protective local networks.

Chaordic balance. Successful initiatives merge chaos and order, allowing horizontal, unstructured communication to naturally generate a new systemic order. This "chaordic" approach avoids the rigid, top-down regulations that often stifle community initiative. By trusting local interactions, entrepreneurs unleash collective intelligence.

4. Social emergence transforms micro-level interactions into macro-level structures

The emergent phenomenon typically arise in the absence of any sort of 'invisible hand' or central controller...

The circle of emergence. Social emergence is the process by which individual intentions and local interactions crystallize into stable, macro-level social structures. This bottom-up trajectory moves through distinct developmental phases, transforming subjective mindsets into objective institutions. It is the mechanism by which "something is created out of nothing."

Five levels of emergence. The transition from individual action to permanent societal structure occurs across five distinct levels:

  • Level 1: Individual intentions, memories, and cognitive processes.
  • Level 2: Interaction patterns, symbolic discourse, and negotiation.
  • Level 3: Ephemeral-emergent structures and temporary roles.
  • Level 4: Stable-emergent group structures and conversational routines.
  • Level 5: Permanent social structures, written laws, and material routines.

Feedback loop reinforcement. Once a macro-level structure emerges, it exerts downward causation, shaping the behavior and mindsets of individuals at the micro level. Kaz Jaworski's telephone co-op in Poland illustrated this, where a simple communication tool ultimately emerged as a highly active, self-reliant civic society. The emerged structure becomes the new reality.

5. Social capital is the primary currency and leverage point of social entrepreneurship

Social capital is productive, making possible the achievements of certain ends that are impossible to accomplish without it.

The power of trust. Social capital consists of the networks, norms, and trust that enable people to act together effectively. Unlike financial capital, which is held individually, social capital is inherently relational and exists within the structure of human connections. It is the essential "social glue" that makes collective action possible.

Bonding versus bridging. To build a resilient society, entrepreneurs must cultivate two distinct types of social capital:

  • Bonding social capital: Creates strong, exclusive ties within homogenous groups, fostering solidarity.
  • Bridging social capital: Establishes weak, inclusive ties across diverse social groups, facilitating resource exchange.

Indirect problem solving. While social activists often attack problems directly, social entrepreneurs build social capital first. This newly created trust and cooperation then serves as the engine that solves the target social problem, while simultaneously empowering the community to tackle future challenges. Social capital transforms passive victims into active problem solvers.

6. Vibrant networks evolve through structured stages to achieve scale-free robustness

The structure of a given network – who interacts with whom, how frequently, and on what terms – has a major bearing on the flow of resources through it.

Scale-free architecture. Large, self-organizing networks are not random; they follow a scale-free structure characterized by highly connected "hubs." This architecture provides immense robustness, making the network highly resilient to local failures while facilitating the rapid diffusion of innovations. It allows a small group to influence a massive population.

Four stages of development. Building a vibrant, self-perpetuating network requires systematically progressing through four developmental stages:

  • Stage 1: Enabling Structure (establishing the physical and structural network grid).
  • Stage 2: Rewarding Content (providing immediate, tangible incentives for participation).
  • Stage 3: Network Identity (fostering a deep sense of belonging and shared purpose).
  • Stage 4: Social Capital (generating high levels of trust and spontaneous collective action).

The power of weak ties. While strong ties keep close-knit groups together, weak ties are the crucial bridges that connect isolated clusters to the wider world. Social entrepreneurs act as super-hubs, weaving these weak ties to ensure a fluid, robust flow of information and resources. This network effect is what allows local solutions to scale globally.

7. A distinct psychological profile enables social-capital building and risk-taking

The entrepreneur thinks creatively and develops a new solution that dramatically breaks with the existing one.

The entrepreneurial mind. Social entrepreneurs possess a unique psychological makeup that distinguishes them from traditional leaders. Empirical research confirms that while they share many traits with social activists, they score significantly higher in two key areas: risk-taking and a belief in the malleability of the world. They are comfortable operating in highly uncertain environments.

Seven core traits. The psychological profile of a successful social-capital builder is defined by seven distinct, interconnected attributes:

  • Unwavering optimism and deep-seated trust in human potential.
  • High propensity for cooperation and collaborative teamwork.
  • Extensive personal and professional social networks.
  • Robust cognitive mechanisms for coping with adversity and failure.
  • High tolerance for ambiguity and calculated risk-taking.
  • A firm belief in the malleability of people and social systems.
  • Lateral, divergent thinking that reframes problems as opportunities.

Malleability of reality. This belief in malleability, aligned with Carol Dweck's growth mindset, allows entrepreneurs to persist against seemingly insurmountable odds. They view social structures and human behaviors not as fixed realities, but as dynamic systems open to creative intervention. This cognitive flexibility is the source of their resilience.

8. Empowering leadership focuses on releasing latent community potential

Their job is to change the system.

Affranchising capabilities. Empowering leadership is the process of unlocking the latent potential of groups and communities, enabling them to take full ownership of social innovations. Unlike transactional leaders who rely on exchanges, or transformational leaders who rely on personal charisma, empowering leaders operate as quiet catalysts. They lead by stepping back.

Behind-the-scenes operation. The empowering leader deliberately minimizes their own role over time, ensuring that the community celebrates the success as their own. This style of leadership is characterized by:

  • Deep social empathy to detect dormant community strengths.
  • Avoidance of patronizing, top-down, expert-driven teaching methods.
  • Implementation of peer-to-peer learning and mutual support platforms.
  • Shifting control parameters (like trust) rather than forcing compliance.

Sustainable independence. By cultivating local leadership and self-reliance, empowering leaders ensure that the change survives their departure. Lucky Chhetri's guide-training program in Nepal exemplifies this, transforming marginalized Himalayan girls into independent, self-sustaining community leaders. The ultimate test of empowering leadership is the leader's own obsolescence.

9. Insurmountable conflicts are resolved by circumvention rather than direct confrontation

The characteristic processes and effects elicited by a given type of social relationship (e.g., cooperative or competitive) tend also to elicit that type of social relationship...

The trap of direct confrontation. Directly attacking a protracted social problem or conflict often reinforces the negative attractor, deepening the deadlock. According to Deutsch's Crude Law, competitive or hostile interactions naturally breed further hostility, trapping the parties in a vicious cycle. Direct confrontation often makes the problem worse.

Strategic circumvention. Social entrepreneurs bypass the core conflict entirely, building a new, positive attractor around a neutral, highly appealing activity. This alternative attractor engages the community in cooperative action, gradually rendering the old conflict irrelevant.

  • David Kuria bypassed Kibera's sanitation conflict by engaging slum dwellers in designing "dream toilets."
  • Manon Barbeau healed First Nation generational trauma through mobile film-making studios.
  • Dr. Eboo Patel resolved interfaith tension by uniting diverse youth around shared community service.

Socio-psychological transformation. By changing the situational context, entrepreneurs force a restructuring of individual cognitive frameworks. When people participate in successful, cooperative actions, they naturally alter their attitudes to align with their new, positive behaviors. This cognitive consistency is the key to transforming deep-seated social conflicts.

10. Modern social change merges business acumen with deep cultural empathy

The new equilibrium is permanent because it first survives and then stabilizes, even though some aspects of the original equilibrium may persist.

The double bottom line. The most effective social innovations combine a passionate social mission with rigorous, business-like execution. By building financial sustainability directly into their models, social entrepreneurs free themselves from the volatile cycle of traditional philanthropy. They treat beneficiaries as partners and customers, not passive recipients of charity.

Ethnoempathy and respect. Financial sustainability must never come at the expense of local culture. True social entrepreneurs possess "ethnoempathy"—a deep, intuitive understanding of a community's unique traditions, taboos, and latent desires.

  • Alou Keita established village banking in Mali by embedding it in traditional decision-making rituals.
  • Ursula Sladek empowered German citizens to own and manage their local green energy grids.
  • Brent Kopperson utilized community-owned wind and solar power to drive economic development in First Nation reserves.

The future of change. As the citizen sector continues to evolve, the boundaries between business and social activism are blurring. The future belongs to hybrid models that leverage market forces to achieve permanent, systemic, and culturally respectful social transformation. By merging empathy with efficiency, they build a more resilient world.


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