1,455 Matching Annotations
  1. Sep 2024
    1. the engenderment of social capital

      we are going to come back to this later!

    2. marketization provides nonprofits with benefits, such as greaterefficiency and innovation, but at the same time affects their ability to fulfill their traditionalroles as guardians of societal values, service providers, advocates for the interests of local com-munities, and purveyors of social capital

      the catch-22 (also alluded to in the other article...)

    3. The article proceeds in the following manner

      a good habit to get into when writing (longer) papers: tell the reader what you're going to do (this paragraph) before you do it (the rest of the paper). We now know what to expect! The structure is clear and this makes the subsequent argument easier to understand as we know what the signposts along the way will be, guiding us to an ultimate destination...

    4. the increasing influence of the values and logic of themarketplace on the nonprofit sector, its so-called marketization

      chief concern of this article - how the non-profit sector is increasingly under the influence of entrepreneurship culture (and its market-based or commercial ideology).

      Please note - not all social entrepreneurship is non-profit (though much of it is, or ought to be). But generally, all non-profit entrepreneurship tends to be guided by a concern for public values and social impact (because, after all, it's not chiefly motivated by profit!).

    5. discourses

      not focused on people (or processes, per se), but discourses (shaping the mental maps we have and the ways we orient ourselves to non-profit work in general...

    6. I have deliberately chosen to use masculine pronouns in my discussion of the characteristics and behavior of theEntrepreneur because the Entrepreneur is typically and traditionally presented as male in the literature, as my discussionof Schumpeter’s “Man of Action”demonstrate

      interesting choice...

    1. "[S]ociety is not like a machine that is created at some point in time and then main-tained with a minimum of effort; it is being continuously re-created, for good or ill, by its members. This will strike some as a burdensome responsibility, but it will summon others to greatness."

      nice way to end it! What seems "risky" for some seems like an opportunity that needs to be taken to others...

    2. the questionable modern notion that individuals need only assume responsibility for themselves in order to enjoy social well-being.

      !!

    3. It's worth asking how modem democracies have evolved to accept individualistic social norms that would cause tribal societies, military units, and sports teams to collapse.

      a very interesting paradox!

    4. olunteering, say, or being helpful to neighbors or addressing social problems-is consid-ered optional (though it is esteemed)

      what's your take on this? Volunteering is now required for graduating from high-school rather than encouraged for its own sake. I dream of living in a neighbourhood where my neighbours "have my back"with mutual reciprocity rather than civil inattention. But it seems less and less esteemed. Maybe I'm embittered by unfortunate circumstances...

    5. Beyond taxation to pay for the social safety net, we don't ask or expect citizens to assume responsibility for the well-being of anyone outside their families.

      yep -- and so much rhetoric these days seems to portray taxation and the social safety net as an indulgence and an imposition (or a threat to individual liberty) rather than an opportunity for (collective) well-being.

      Liberty ... the foundation of (Neo)liberalism...

    6. What we don't have is a collective belief that with citizen-ship comes a responsibility to serve society.

      Redressing this seems to be what the authors hope for (with regards to social entrepreneurship)

    7. As the field of social entrepreneurship continues to expand, it may foreshadow a new stage of democracy-one animated by citizens who are actively involved in building, shaping, and renewing organizations to improve society. As such, it may also come to redefine citizenship.

      remember how, earlier, I stated that social entrepreneurship depends on neoliberalism to redefine the neoliberal model? Here, that paradox is exemplified -- this hope expressed here sounds positively opposed to the ruling Neo-liberal model.

    8. In wealthy democracies, social entrepreneurs spend as much time renewing old institutions as they do building new ones. In poor, weak, or failed states, however, social entrepre-neurs are more often focused on basic needs which people in Western democracies take for granted.

      a crucial distinction between the shape of social entrepreneurship in the developed vs. the developing world (horrible adjectives, by the way ... every economy is developing)

    9. It is difficult for social entrepre-neurship to flourish without a baseline of security and social order.

      sometimes, you just have to state the obvious...

    10. a kind of activism is emerging that is more concerned with problem solving than voicing outrage.

      really emphasizing how social entrepreneurs can bring about a constructive element of change (rather than merely trying to "activate" outrage that change is necessary ... and then hoping that governments or the private sector will take action)

    11. Outside activists have convinced companies that they need to change, while social entrepreneurs working on the inside have shown them what to do.

      push and pull -- work with the system (or within it) to change it, or stay on the outside looking in...

    12. We might define a good citizen as one who takes an active and intentional role in the shaping of a good society, both at an individual and communal level.

      this seems like a somewhat "radical" proposition in our current environment...

    13. To get the attention of policy makers, social entrepreneurs have to learn how to compete head to head with well-financed lobbyists and any number of special interest groups.

      hah!

    14. Social entrepreneurship is inductive and outward-looking: it moves from observation and experimentation to institution-alization and independent adoption.

      nice ... I love a good inductive vs. deductive analogy...

      start with specific examples, say, of entrepreneurial resourcefulness (doing more with less) and work up to implement success on a more generalized level...

      also, as you move from initial observations to general ideas and theories of how to bring about wider social change, it also brings us back to that metaphorical iceberg (!) -- because the "real" types of change might not be so easily observable...

    15. To get them to break with the past, it's not enough to condemn them or boycott their companies. We must show them how to build the future. We must advise or compete with them.

      a central insight of social entrepreneurship...

    16. As a long-term change strategy, however, the greatest power of activism may not be its ability to compel action but its capacity to elicit empathy by making injustice and suffering palpable.

      interesting. There's that word -- EMPATHY -- again!

    17. The primary feedback mechanisms for policy makers-press reports and elections-punish failure and demand results in unrealistically short time frames.

      a governmental framework for change tends to be too limited...

    18. Activists bring political or consumer pressure to bear by showing their numbers and their intensity, and thereby forcing elected officials, business executives, or other leaders to heed their demands and attend to their grievances.

      ok...

    19. One fundamental difference between today' s social entre-preneurs and yesterday's activists is that, historically, activists have proceeded largely as outsiders to power-like uninvited guests storming the gates of the mansion. By contrast, social entrepreneurs frequently combine outside- and inside-oriented tactics to bring change.

      historical shift in power struggles... as entrepreneurial culture has become mainstream, so too have types of consciousness raising that might once have ben more marginal...

    20. Activism can be thought of as a subset of social entrepreneur-ship

      I really like this section (and it tends to be an easy entry-point into talking about real-world examples of change agents ...)

    21. Governments can be innovative, of course, especially when institutional entrepreneurs, or intrapreneurs, are given leeway to innovate.

      sometimes easier said than done...

    22. Just as nobody can predict where the next eBay, Coogle, or Twitter will come from, nobody can predict where the best solutions to tough social problems will emerge.

      indeed...

    23. it flows from the bottom up. Typically it grows out of one person's direct interaction with a problem and a simple question: "Hey, what if we tried X?" What follows is an experiment, a response, some adjust-ment, and more experimentation. Over time, the entrepreneur accumulates experience. He or she works to attract resources and usually has to persuade people to abandon conventional careers in order to join a small team of people committed to an unproven idea. At the outset, the process requires unusual levels of commitment. It also requires humility and faith,

      social entrepreneurship is a bottom-up process of constant experimentation, gaining experience and thus ability to succeed persuading others of the merits of an unconventional approach.

    24. change by influencing the decision making of large institu-tions or by changing public attitudes, while social entrepre-neurs pursue a wider range of options, including building institutions that directly implement solutions themselves.

      the crucial distinction isn't the nature of change but the targets for how this change might be implemented

    25. twelve social entrepreneurs supported by Echoing Green who all experi-enced a "moment of obligation" that caused them to change course and pursue work of deep personal significance.

      this tends to be quite distinct from stories of a "lightbulb moment" that sometimes accompany traditional entrepreneurship.

    26. Society needs to encourage and harness decentralized social experimentation on a larger scale and far more systematically than it currently does.

      the authors' prescription for change

    27. What is innovative in one generation may be conventional or even retrograde in the next. Microfinance began as an example of social entrepreneurship, but now these services are being extended by formal financial institutions primarily interested in profitability.

      incorporation! Blast from the past (COMM 1F90 -- when dangerous, rebellious, radical ideas and movements are made acceptable by partially accepting them)

    28. We often reduce social entrepreneurship to stories of char-ismatic people. As we have mentioned, social entrepreneur-ship describes a process, a way to organize problem-solving efforts.

      focus on the process, not the people...

    29. Social entrepreneurs don't control major resources, and, unlike governments, they can't command compliance. They have to leverage resources that others control and influence people by articulating goals that are meaningful.

      social entrepreneurs' greatest resource isn't financial capital but their social capital. Infleunce and meaning ...

    30. Social entrepreneurs are most effective when they demonstrate ideas that inspire others to go out and create their own social change. The beauty of demonstrating positive pathways is that it is possible to redi-rect human energy without telling people what to do.

      charisma, hope, faith, inspiration...

    31. Some researchers argue that there is little use in making distinctions and that all entrepreneurs should be considered social entrepreneurs because they generate employment and meet needs.

      What are your thoughts on this?

    32. Today the attention meter is angling in the direction of social entrepreneurship as more people are asking themselves the question at its heart: What kind of enterprise is worth devoting your life to build?

      a very good question...

    33. In our view, however, banks prac-tice social entrepreneurship only when they seek to maximize social impact rather than profitability.

      keeping it pure... whereas others would argue that social impact can only be maximized via profitability, otherwise it won't be sustainable...

    34. Without minimizing their contributions to the solution, it's useful to distinguish conventional firms from those that are pioneering new products, attempting to change industries, or building markets in particularly difficult contexts.

      social entrepreneurship manifests a different kind of struggle than any firm seeking to achieve "social impact"

    35. Both types of entrepreneurship require vision, initiative, organization building and "marketing." In terms of skill and temperament, social and business entrepreneurs are strikingly similar. But their primary objectives are different.

      I thought it funny how social entrepreneurs can seek profit, and business entrepreneurs can trumpet their social responsibility. But they're not likely to be confused for each other when it comes to their fundamental mission.

    36. one quality not to be overlooked is the capacity to derive joy and celebrate small successes, even while the path ahead remains difficult. Social entrepreneurship is a long-term commitment, with many setbacks and disappointments. Those who stick it out and manage to recruit others always find ways to enjoy the journey.

      this is a really good point that sometimes gets overlooked in the quest for efficiency and $$. And, yes, it may be more important in the even longer life-cycles of social entrepreneurship.

    37. The main difference has to do with purpose, or what the enterprise is trying to maximize. For social entrepreneurs, the bottom line is to maximize some form of social impact, usually by addressing an urgent need that is being mishandled, over-looked, or ignored by other institutions. For business entre-preneurs, the bottom line may be to maximize profits or shareholder wealth, or to build an ongoing, respected entity that provides value to customers and meaningful work to employees.

      distillation of the difference between social and business entrepreneurs...

    38. The most common misconception about entrepreneurs is that they like to take risks. While researching his landmark book The Achieving Society, David McClelland found that entrepreneurs are attracted to challenges when the key deter-minant of success is skill, not chance. Entrepreneurs aren't gamblers, he wrote. In fact, they will go to extreme lengths to minimize or eliminate risks, painstakingly seeking informa-tion to increase the odds of success. They usually overesti-mate their chances of success, however, which is why others perceive them as risk takers.

      general description of entrepreneurial risk

    39. We wouldn't call someone a social entrepreneur who introduced snacks like potato chips or Twinkies to the Chinese market, even if his or her firm generated a million jobs.

      Hah! quite the rebuttal!

    40. one should not be deemed superior to the other, although social entrepreneurship is often more challenging because it tackles problems that have defied governmental approaches and for which market solutions have not yet been demonstrated.

      social entrepreneurship may even be more difficult...

    41. Many social entrepreneurs believe that they are fulfilling their life's purpose. For some, this conviction stems from a conscious faith. For others, it grows intuitively and slowly as they pursue different kinds of work until alighting on a voca-tion that expresses their values and talents.

      VOCATION!

    42. To succeed, social entrepreneurs have to remain steadfast in the face of choruses of doubters and critics.

      except this is starting to sound ideological...

    43. Mothers Against Drunk Driving

      a domestic example of social entrepreneurship that might not otherwise leap to the forefront (all about awareness and pressing legislators for social change rather than Microfinance etc)

    44. Psychologists note that entrepreneurs score high on the quality "inner locus of control." They locate power within, rather than outside, themselves.

      a trenchant theme I've been trying to underscore. Again, generic entrepreneurial quality...

    45. Entrepreneurs intentionally cultivate relation-ships with people across political camps and from a variety of backgrounds so they can better understand how to navigate change.

      Entrepreneurs tend to be ideology-agnostic (to be able to go wherever the good ideas and opportunities take them).

    46. they sometimes have difficulty working closely with people who want to lead more balanced lives.

      this is definitely dripping with ideology

    47. Social entrepreneurs frequently speak of an adult they were close to in childhood, usually a parent or other relative, who was highly ethical and had a profound influence on their thinking. They often refer to these relatives when explaining their inability to bypass the suffering of others.

      empathy -- strongly correlated with psychological development and social entrepreneurship

    48. Although some people are born with more entrepreneurial inclination than others, the management expert Peter Drucker has argued that most people can learn to behave like entrepreneurs.

      And this is the real point -- it's easier to problem solve (creatively) the more problems you've had to solve, the more experience you have.

    49. For people who are often exposed to extreme suffering, social entrepreneurs are surprisingly nonideological.

      I found this very interesting (one of the ways that activists tend to differ from social entrepreneurs also...)

    50. Many also recall instances when they spoke up against injustice-called out a bully on the playground, for example, or pointed out a racial stereotype inadvertently used by a teacher-and discovered that they could make a differ-ence.

      This type of experience, on the other hand, seems incredibly germane to social entrepreneurs much more so than other types...

    51. In particular, certain types of experiences seem to help people, especially children, discover their agency. Many social entrepreneurs can recall a time in childhood when they were actively encouraged by an adult to take initiative-to start a club or organize a league, for example-and then assisted in the process. The achievement taught them to value and act on their own ideas.

      I like this idea -- again, it seems to relate to all entrepreneurs, however. Ask yourself if you can think of any similar formative experiences in your background.

    52. of behavior they adopt.

      (continuation of last bit from the previous page) I really like this -- we tend to focus on traits, qualities, etc. (as if they're inborn, but they tend to be more patterns of behaviour exhibited by entrepreneurial figures. They seem to be more comfortable with risk, more confident, etc. (but these seem to manifest because of the situations certain people place themselves in. It tends to be a chicken vs. egg (or nature vs. nuture) conundrum...

    53. Entrepreneurs tend to be good listeners. They must be able to identify with others so they can understand their motiva-tions and bring them together into effective teams. Andrew Carnegie said that entrepreneurs must be willing to endure the "humbling eclipse of self" that comes from "profound learning from others." They tend to be open-minded and on the lookout for useful information.

      Empathy again!

      And self-effacing, other-oriented ...

      And curious!

    54. If they don't have the skills to solve a problem, they believe they can acquire them by experi-menting, by observing experts, or by getting help from others. When things go wrong, they want to know primarily what happened-and what needs to be fixed, not whom to blame. They don't take failure as an indication of personal inad-equacy but as an indication of a gap in their understanding, something that can be remedied with more effort.

      link to growth mindset! Again, generic entrepreneurial orientation

    55. t's important to reemphasize that social entrepre-neurship is a process

      Later on, it's said that social entrepreneurship is a process by which citizens organize to share civic life. I like this...

    56. t can't work if there is insuf-ficient space for experimentation or if people are unwilling to talk about failure.

      a recurring theme...

    57. All of them share some basic temperamental qualities. For example, entrepreneurs are comfortable with uncertainty, have a high need for autonomy, and are biased toward action. However, entrepreneurs are not necessarily highly charis-matic or confident. Research indicates that their success is less a function of inborn personality traits than the patterns

      generic qualities again -- obviously, if these are the qualities of (market) entrepreneurs, they must obviously apply to those who seek to ply their trade to create a different kind of dividend...

    58. Many extraordinary people work closely with social entrepreneurs for years without receiving public recognition, including many "intrapreneurs," who drive considerable innovation within their organizations.

      it takes a village...

    59. To orchestrate positive long-term changes, we need people who think beyond quarterly reports and news and election cycles, and who persist in the absence of short-term rewards or recognition.

      This is easier said than done. It used to be said that Canadians were better than many at delayed gratification... but this is asking to consider the possibility of growth that isn't adequately captured or translated into easy expressions of the "bottom line"

      This also reminds me of the iceberg analogy -- where we directly encounter something at the empirical level -- it is observable, testable, and measurable in a 'real' sense. Then, we have the 'actual' level, where we witness events caused by ‘real’ level phenomena. So, short-term changes can be input into a spreadsheet while larger changes can be seen through more indirect influence -- greater access to healthcare, education, etc. Finally, we have the deeper level of the metaphorical iceberg -- the 'real' level. This requires a 'deeper' level of understanding since these phenomena remain largely unseen, but actually drive and shape the human and social world. These "real" levels of change are not just long-term (like multi-generational wealth), but also senses of security and privilege that contribute to empirical and short-term changes such as entrepreneurial ventures with specific time-lines.

      Do you tend to think of positive change or rewards or recognition in qualitative or quantitative terms? Are you ok with short term pain for long term gain? What about long term small gains?

    60. The job can be boiled down to one essential function: the social entrepreneur helps others to envision a new possibility, appreciate its meaning, and recognize how it can be broken down into doable steps that build momentum for change.

      again - a generic description, except you're supposed to keep in mind that social entrepreneurs are trying to make the world an essentially better place (so the nature or scope of the desired change might be decidedly different)

    61. Social entrepreneurs have to figure out how to make it happen

      A potential motto for everyone...

    62. The system changer must therefore overcome apathy, habit, incomprehension, and disbelief while facing heated resistance

      people with power are often threatened by those who seek to alter the system...

    63. The role of the social entrepreneur can be understood through these examples. Social entrepreneurs initiate and lead change processes that are self-correcting, growth-oriented, and impact-focused. They create new configurations of people and coordinate their efforts to attack problems more successfully than before. It's a complex role that involves a great deal of listening, recruiting, and persuading. It takes a curious combination of sensitivity and bullheadedness, humility and audacity, and restlessness and patience to lead a change process in the face of indifference, habit, fear, resource constraints, vested interest, and institutional defenses

      There is nothing in this description of the roles and requisite qualities of social entrepreneurs that can't also describe generic entrepreneurs. But the social and political intransigence of vested interests described beforehand do tend to complicate things more for social entrepreneurs working in economically disenfranchised locales...

    64. Social entrepreneurs must attract attention and funding, overcome apathy and opposition, shift behavior and mobilize political will, continually improve the idea, and take care of all the details in painstaking fashion, no matter how long it takes.

      context!

      (this sounds like entrepreneurship in general, but it's a lot more things to be concerned about than simply bringing a good idea to market...)

    65. From the perspective of an entrepreneur, it makes no sense to talk about an idea without talking about the details of implementation

      actions trump words.

    66. In their article "Social Entrepreneurship: The Case for Definition," Roger L. Martin and Sally Osberg argue that the role of the social entrepreneur is to move society from a "stable but inherently unjust equi-librium" to a "new, stable equilibrium" that releases potential and alleviates suffering on a major scale. Social entrepreneurs work to ensure that sensible ideas take root and actually change people's thinking and behavior across a society.

      succinct description of the role of social entrepreneurs

    67. Americans are worried that their banking, health, education, and criminal justice systems are profoundly inadequate for today's challenges. Few disagree about the need for reform, yet many insiders battle to defend the status quo.

      change is inevitable -- but it isn't easy!

    68. these entrepreneurs had enormous potential to lead change efforts, but they were hobbled by many factors: they didn't have much money; they were misunderstood by their families and friends; and they often felt vulnerable and insignificant, isolated from one another and largely ignored by the media, the business sector, and the government.

      but good people and good ideas often run up against bad social (and political and economic) conditions!

    69. the organizations that were making a difference had both a good idea and an unusually committed, creative, and action-oriented person at the helm: an idea champion or entrepreneur.

      the public good requires good ideas which require good people to implement them...

    70. Microfinance, an idea that was treated as a crazy experiment twenty-five years ago, is now a global industry.

      yep

    71. Grameen and BRAC reached national scale in Bangladesh, each employing tens of thousands of staff members whose work touched the lives of tens of millions of Bangladeshis in almost every one of the nation's seventy thousand villages. Like great businesses, as they grew, they improved, adding new services, using technology more effectively, and spawning imitations. They built cultures of pride and optimism.

      success

    72. Rather than implement preset poli-cies through bureaucracies in a top-down fashion, they grew solutions from the bottom in a process characterized by trial and error, continuous iteration, and a sharp focus on results.

      entrepreneurial attitude in general...

    73. The conventional practice at the time was for development assistance to flow directly from governments of wealthy countries to governments of poor countries, and from the top to the bottom through local government channels.

      The old way didn't always produce the best results (change, on the ground...)

    74. if an idea or program failed, they could shut it down, absorb the lesson, and try something else. And many failures did ensue; some even grew into crises. But they used the failures as opportunities to think deeper about how to solve the country's problems.

      entrepreneurial risk depends upon low cost of failure. Too many sunken costs and the venture becomes unviable.

    75. To develop solutions, they experimented continuously

      entrepreneurship, risk, innovation...

    76. People seeking solutions are no longer willing to wait for governments, corporations, churches, or universi-ties to lead.

    77. two ground breaking examples of social entrepreneurship occurred in one of the poorest countries in the world: Bangladesh

      ...

    78. Grameen and BRAC operated under the presumption that Bangladeshis were capable, and they sought to build capacity and self-reliance within the country. They focused not just on material poverty but on dignity, eschewing charity in favor of respectful transactions.

      self-supporting businesses avoid the taint of paternalism. Also, note the emphasis on social support transcends material enrichment (it doesn't ignore it, of course. Social entrepreneurship, in many ways, starts with it, but cannot be limited to it).

    79. Governments conspicuously failed to stand up to busi-ness interests when it came to safeguarding the environment, protecting human rights, ensuring access to health care and decent working conditions, and regulating financial institu-tions.

      economic opportunity and social suppression often go hand in hand...

    80. Urbaniza-tion has coincided with the growth of large middle classes in Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, and other developing countries. And because members of this class enjoy access to education, wealth, and political power yet remain less vested in historic systems of privilege, they often become highly effective social entrepreneurs.

      interesting observation...

    81. Whether it's the environmental threat, infec-tious diseases, global terrorism, or economic crises, we have little time to fix things when they go awry; nor can we address problems chiefly in a centralized manner. Solutions must be decentralized and integrated and deployed in real time.

      People are losing faith in old systems and bureaucratic arrangements that privilege the few and don't bring opportunities to the many (or do so too slowly).

    82. Let's put it all together now.

    83. at the end of the eighteenth century, well over three-quarters of all people were living in slavery or serfdom. Of those not enslaved, the majority were forced to submit to the rule of kings or dictators, locked into immutable traditions that did not permit dissent, or consigned to short lives characterized by crushing poverty, disease, and violence.

      I was reminded of this recently while on a tour of historic Fort George. Life in the military at the end of the 18th century sounded horrible with its ever-abundant risk of disease, death, or dismemberment. But if you weren't a member of the monied elite, it was a guaranteed meal and roof over one's head (in exchange for one's fealty).

    84. The biggest driver of change has been the women's move-ment

      !!

    85. Increasingly, people in rural areas and slums possess the skills, resources, and confidence to create businesses and other organizations.

      a major focus of social entrepreneurship!

    86. For change to happen, new institutions and new spheres of power would need to be created.

      !!

    87. It was during this period, the Progressive Age, that enlightened philanthro-pists began experimenting with "scientific charity," which aimed to transform the conditions that produced poverty, not just to provide comfort to the poor and ease the consciences of the rich.

      business entrepreneurship creates economic wealth alongside social problems -- so social entrepreneurship offers to fix those problems (through more entrepreneurship...).

      This actually demonstrates the remarkable flexibility of neoliberalism! The very idea of “social entrepreneurship” revolves around the notion that we can somehow harness the wonders of the market to deal with social ills like poverty, hunger, and homelessness (problems that arose out of or were exacerbated because of the free market).

    88. many new prob-lems, including population displacement, the decimation of traditional cultures, abusive labor practices, environmental disasters, and the exploitative pursuit of cheap minerals and energy source

      the dark side of corporate growth

    89. The rush of citizen activity that Americans experienced a century ago when faced with a profound and painful transi-tion is analogous to today's global changes.

      "citizen activity" sounds a lot like civic activism.

      Do you think "activist" and "social entrepreneur" are largely synonymous labels?

    90. What was the effect of the emergence of business entrepre-neurship? The economist William J. Baumol has noted that during the 1700s, per-capita incomes in Europe are estimated to have risen 20 or 30 percent; during the 18oos, they rose 200 to 300 percent. And during the 1900s, the conservative estimate is that per-capita income in economies increased 700 percent.

      entrepreneurship brought economic enrichment...

    91. Citizens regu-larly challenge power and convention in countries where, thirty or forty years ago, they might have been "disappeared," "banned," or imprisoned for doing so.

      !!

    92. During the twentieth century, largely owing to improvements in sanita-tion, the advent of antibiotics, and advances in plant genetics (which led to the Green Revolution), life expectancy soared from 25 to 63 in the developing world and from 45 to 75 in the developed world.

      the winds of change...

    93. entrepreneurs improve the productive capacity of society and provide the "creative destruction" that propels economic change

      background -- familiar rhetoric...

      wowee zowee -- I just saw this news item: Meme-food entrepreneur Eminem launches "Mom's Spaghetti" restaurant. Everyone really is an entrepreneur these days ... creative destruction indeed.

      https://www.avclub.com/meme-food-entrepreneur-eminem-launches-moms-spaghetti-1847742922?traffic_source=Connatix

    94. the dismal science, economics,

      hah!

    95. a new sector of society-a private sector-in which individuals could reorganize the patterns of production in order to capture the benefits of their enterprise.

      Enlightenment values ...

    96. The rise of modern business created new wealth (large middle classes), new comforts (washing machines, electric lights, faster transportation), new patterns of living (40-hour workweeks, vacation time, retirement)

      corporate benefits...

    97. Corporations have grown immensely powerful. Three hundred multinational corporations control roughly a quarter of the world's wealth. Their managers frequently make deci-sions that run counter to the long-term interests of the public and even their own shareholders, as the recent financial crisis has illustrated.

      context

    98. By demonstrating how entrepreneurial qualities can be channeled to address major problems, it has opened up new pathways of behavior and methods of analysis for people who are motivated by a desire to solve those problems.

      entrepreneurship for good! Advancing the public good! That's good!

    99. in seventeenth-century France button makers were arrested for experimenting with cloth, and thousands. of merchants were sent to the galleys, broken on the wheel, and hanged simply because they imported printed calicoes for sale.

      ouch! times do change!

    100. A careful reader of history could identify the hidden hand of social entrepreneurs in the creation of many institutions and movements that we take for granted.

      I'm curious what examples you could think of...

    101. Social entrepreneurs have always existed. But in the past they were called visionaries, humanitarians, philanthropists, reformers, saints, or simply great leaders

      interesting - previous labels for similar social functions, but in earlier eras where the entrepreneur wasn't the dominant archetype...

    102. Despite the absence of a universally accepted definition, the term has proved useful because it builds on long-held understandings about entrepreneurs but applies them in new ways.

      ok - this point clarifies the earlier paragraph and reinforces what I said in my previous comment. It also sets up the next sentence, which is more productive...

    103. create public value, pursue new opportunities, innovate and adapt, act boldly, leverage resources they don't controC and exhibit a strong sense of accountability.

      general definition - but note that the only things that is different about this definition compared to almost every other generic definition of entrepreneurship is the addition of "creating public value"

    104. Social entrepreneurship is a process by which citizens build or transform institutions to advance solutions to social prob-lems, such as poverty, illness, illiteracy, environmental destruc-tion, human rights abuses and corruption, in order to make life better for many

      definition #1!

      This sounds good - who wouldn't want to be a (social) entrepreneur? Not just a do-gooder, but someone who does good (for others). Not just doing something good for oneself!

    105. creating new combinations of people and resources that significantly improve society's capacity to address problems.

      not so much a definition, but a preamble to definition #2 (a classic one)...

    1. he is familiar, but novel; within our grasp, butjust out of reach

      entrepreneurial "man" is adept at navigating liminality (I like this phrase!) ... always on the threshold of something new, but recognizable in terms of familiar archetypes so as to not be upsetting or too disruptive...

    2. the American dream is now reserved forwealthy capitalists and even the corporation-as-person

      ouch! See the documentary "the corporation" for more details on this ...

    3. I had highlighted this exact phrase too (you got to it before I did!) While we still want to believe in the self-made person, we can't help but see how much easier it is to make it if you have wealth and elite networking on your side.

    4. On one hand, entrepreneurialman appeals to the individualist, progress-focused, ‘‘everyman’’ aspects of deeply-rooted American dream ideology. Yet, influenced by neoliberal appeals to individu-alism and wealth creation, entrepreneurial man also represents an elite, privilegedsensibility.

      (having your cake and eating it too!)

    5. Do organization (wo)men still exist, and how dothey interpret or give meaning to the entrepreneurial man archetype?

      A good question...

    6. Under personal capitalism, a philanthropic mindset was intendedto be an everyday aspect of being self made. Under entrepreneurial capitalism,philanthropy is a large-scale, global phenomenon undertaken once an entrepreneurhas already achieved great wealth

      really interesting distinction / "evolution"

    7. The American dream has become alarmingly out ofreach for those who are already disadvantaged; or the (entrepreneurial) Americandream is just as available, if not more so, than it ever was.

      A war of ideas -- a discursive struggle! Not really a paradox since both can't be simultaneously true (yet each side vehemently defends their position and derides the opposing one!

    8. the rule*according to the business periodicals*is that entrepreneursare inherently ethical and valuable societal members, because they are bringingneoliberal individualism to life

      this seems to be an example of (bad) circular logic: entrepreneurs are inherently valuable (to society) because they generate wealth, yet this wealth is mostly valuable to individuals who realize an individualistic, inward-looking work-is-life ethos.

    9. This paper argues that the power of entrepreneurialism lays in its ability to meshneoliberal and historical ideologies of individualism to form the entrepreneurial manarchetype

      yes -- the entrepreneurial figure (man) is not ahistorical, but woven through with historically significant elements

    10. rejecting the conformity encouragedunder managerial capitalism yet retaining the organization man’s patriarchalheternormativity

      ...

    11. At the end of the day, the selfmade archetype aligns entrepreneurial man with the responsibility and instinctualdecision making of personal capitalism

      recap redux

    12. Instead of challenginghegemonic masculinity, the consumerist heterosexuality of masculinity remainssalient

      recap...

    13. the entrepreneurial man archetype recalls the rugged, adventuresomemasculinity of the self made man and rejects the conformity, but not the patriarchy,of the organization man.

      how the entrepreneur (as undertaker of risky ventures) becomes the caretaker of the public good (because the private market becomes synonymous with public domain)

    14. Yet, in the second entwining of theself made, organization, and entrepreneurial archetypes, the potential for ethicalcritique of the entrepreneurial man is assuaged by appeals to the rational sensibility ofthe organization man.

      fancy lingo ...

    15. this study highlights that neoliberal entrepreneurialism signals a revival ofpersonal capitalism, though without the implied social contract. In moving beyondmanagerial capitalism, neoliberal entrepreneurialism actually hearkens back to acapitalist economy characterized by inward-focused intuition and decision making

      ouch!

    16. entrepreneurial man rejects self made man’simplicit social contract where, in exchange for an opportunity to advance, thehumble young man would become a responsible member of society.

      ah, but the new rejects some parts of the old... this seems to be a damning critique of the neoliberal order...

    17. being labeled the ‘‘right kind’’ of entrepreneur(i.e., masculine, technological, innovative, wealth-generating) automatically char-acterizes one as an upstanding citizen

      so interesting...

    18. the entrepreneurial man archetype emerges within the contemporaryeconomic milieu of entrepreneurial capitalism, where innovation, technology, andwealth creation signal successful entrepreneurship

      old is new again (not news...)

    19. Part of the allure of the entrepreneurial man and entrepreneurial capi-talism lays in this selective mobilization/rejection of previous archetypes

      yep...

    20. entrepreneurs were describedas individuals who possessed traditional qualities of hegemonic masculinity(Kimmell, 1997) such as strength and adventurousness, rationality and emotionalcontrol, and a public and patriarchal persona.4 Entrepreneurs were, for instance,described in terms symbolizing war and sports.

      typical...

    21. The depiction of entrepreneurs as masculine in traditional as well as alternativeways surfaces neoliberal entrepreneurialism as advancing what we might call a ‘‘newold’’ masculinity*one that constructs the entrepreneur as adventuresome along thelines of the self made man, but as ‘‘safe’’ along the lines of the paternal,heternormative organization man

      new and old at the same time ... different but familiar.

    22. As culture and institutions have shifted,the ideology of the American dream has also begun to be re-storied in the language ofprivatization. Here, the entrepreneurial man archetype models the ideal contempor-ary individual as someone who is in society but not of society, who is focused on self-interest in the form of personal wealth.

      private individuals, self-worth and self-interest (self-interested individuals).

    23. the self made man, organization man, and neoliberalideology as entwined within neoliberal entrepreneurialism

      all 3 contained in the current discourse...

    24. venture capitalists were the robberbarons, and entrepreneurs the ‘‘little guy’’ in the American dream story. Entrepre-neurial morality therefore became underscored by the notion that entrepreneurs arejust trying to do the ‘‘right thing.’

      history...

    25. This paternalistic care extended to the‘‘public good’’ role that entrepreneurs supposedly enact in the economy

      systemic paternalism!

    26. The entrepreneur origin story presents an ontological paradox: Entrepreneurs aresimultaneously ‘‘everyman’’ but are also unique.

      the unique everyman (oxymoronic? or paradoxical?)

    27. Paternalism was mostobvious in how entrepreneurs were often linked to wives and children depicted asneeding stability, care, and protection

      paternalism...

    28. Even the masculinity of ‘‘failed’’ entrepreneurswas reassured because, like boxers, entrepreneurs ‘‘take a punch and then get up offthe canvas to win the fight.’’

      hegemonic masculinity...

    29. Finally, a significant characteristic of entrepreneurs as represented in the businessperiodicals was that they were cast as unreservedly masculine

      yep...

    30. Such stories positioned the entrepreneur as hailing from humbleor difficult roots to work (usually) his way into success or as possessed with a uniqueand innate inclination for entrepreneurship that he purposefully fostered

      indeed...

    31. entrepreneurswere positioned in opposition to venture capitalists, the individuals and groups whosefinancial sponsorship was named fundamental to entrepreneurial development.

      Think "Dragon's Den" / "Shark Tank"

    32. Notably, the preferred path to innovation was found in technology

      underwhelming ...

    33. weare able to see the entrepreneur as couched within a seemingly ‘‘new’’ economicmilieu that indicates a preference for technologically innovative and elite forms ofentrepreneurship. Second, we can begin to see how these preferences hearken back tothe Industrial Revolution (e.g., reference to Thomas Edison) and therefore recall thearchetype of the self-made man

      moving forward by looking back ... new wine in old bottles...

    34. My interrogation of entrepreneurial discourse laysin my own fascination with entrepreneurs

      I love this self-reflexive declaration. You too can start with an object of fascination that motivates you ...

    35. s anew economy archetype, entrepreneurial man is a paradoxically unique everymanconstructed at the intersection of three multidimensional tropes: (1) entrepreneurialcapitalism, (2) ethical familiarity, and (3) traditional and alternative masculinity.

      kind of a thesis statement, developed conceptually...

    36. , entrepreneurship was predicated on the need for entrepreneursto continually generate profit

      not that "innovative" of an insight ... yet...

    37. looking for patterns, inclusions/exclusions, and an understanding of context as related to power, control, andoppression.

      the method of analysis, in basic language...

    38. entrepreneur in business discourse? What coherent image(s), if any, represents theidealized entrepreneur? and, How does this idealization compare to previousorganizational archetypes?

      3 guiding questions...

    39. the periodicalsdepicted growth and profit as the essence of entrepreneurialism

      starting with the obvious...

    40. A significant trope in the periodicals championed entrepreneurial capitalism byhighlighting entrepreneurs involved with wealth creation, innovation, and technol-ogy.

      D'uh...

    41. Gone were the assumptions of men as self-defining individualists, and insteadmen looked to replicate the paternalism that they received from the company

      This differs radically from the Steve Jobs entrepreneurial archetype (sacrificing family for time with the company)

    42. a secondtrope of entrepreneurial man is that he is rendered familiar and painted as inherentlytrustworthy, thereby evoking ethical assumptions associated with the American dream

      not threatening but reassuring...

    43. The organization man archetype, made popular by Whyte’s (1956) critique,became a symbol for a different kind of American dream, characterized bycareerism and company loyalty. Rejecting the unpredictability of small and familybusiness, organization men sought definite tasks and working hours (Fraser, 2002),bankable promotions and raises, retirement pensions, and job security in exchangefor their loyalty (Erickson & Pierce, 2005). The organization man did not makewaves and was not overly ambitious, but rose up the ranks systematically, in themanner prescribed by the organization

      This archetype doesn't "rock the boat" but rather plays by the rules and gets rewarded in the end... not for their imagination, ingenuity, or innovation, but for their fealty.

    44. The economic system of the self made man was that of personal capitalism

      personal capitalism = interesting. You have to be entrepreneurial to take care of yourself (not a corporation or stock value ...)

    45. enthusiasm for technology, innovation, andindividualism that underpins entrepreneurial capitalism

      good condensing statement

    46. This energetic Americandream implied that ‘‘through hard work, innate talent, and a little bit of pluck andluck, anyone can achieve anything’’

      !! Not THAT dissimilar from a lot of discourses today about "just do-ing it" ...

    47. Throughthe blending of these qualities of character, this genre also promoted a rags-to-respectability mentality, although Alger’s stories are typically mis-remembered aspromoting rags-to-riches

      through self-made, entrepreneurial action, one can "move on up" both in terms of spending power and in terms of the opinions of others...

    48. entrepreneurial capitalism, where entrepreneurial endeavors represent monetarysuccess and moral fulfillment

      wow - we often focus on monetary (but not moral) fulfilment. Any thoughts? Capitalism as moral force for betterment?

    49. The ability for an individual to ‘‘make something’’ of oneself in an ever-growing,connected society came to signify the ideology of the ‘American dream.’

      to prevent highlighting an awful lot of the previous paragraph, I just highlighted this -- the search for a new life, the ideal of ever-possible technological progress, Protestant work-ethic, pulling oneself up by the bootstraps ideology ... it all comes together...

    50. neoliberal entrepreneurialism,scholarship in this area tends to assume that this ideology is fairly new

      this is the entire rationale for this article -- to disprove such a limited focus...

    51. privatization and arejection of bureaucracy position the individual as the central agent in managing thesocioeconomic status of him/herself and others.

      neoliberal context...

    52. Scholars have observed thatentrepreneurs are expected to be ‘‘risk takers and perhaps ...daredevils’’ (Ahl,2004, p. 45) and to espouse a kind of aggression that is reflected in ‘‘a fast-paced,semi-fantasy life, detached playfulness, compulsion to work and succeed, manipula-tiveness, toughness and domination’

      yes indeed - the aforementioned achievement is sought through "traditionally" and stereotypically masculine traits of risky, aggressive behaviour.

    53. By comparing today’sarchetype with previous archetypes, we can understand how today’s entrepreneurmeshes characteristics from other archetypes with neoliberal individualism torender the archetype sensible

      yep - our current archetypes didn't form in a vacuum

    54. there is certainly a privileged performance of masculinity (that dovetails with a privileged discourse of race, for sure) All of which ties in with an individual-focused discourse of achievement

    55. According to some, we have entered an era where ‘‘very ordinary people are the mainplayers

      aha! neoliberalism accords with the supposed democratizing of opportunity!

    56. asthe archetype inspires awe, mystery, and romance, it is also ambiguous andunpredictable to the degree that it may manifest differently in various contexts.

      getting into the (productive) qualities of archetypes -- they are influential, inspirational, and aspirational.

    57. The mid-twentieth century saw a shift away from self made, pioneer individualismand toward organizational conformity

      The organizational man (working for a large corporation) cometh...

    58. The self made man and personal capitalism were idealized in the popular stories ofHoratio Alger, where being self made was associated with personal morality.

      hard work is good for you (both good for your social-economic status, and good for your character!)

    59. The economic milieu of this archetype was managerial capitalism.

      the organization man is not a self-made man. Managerial capitalism doesn't depend upon personal capitalism!

    60. archetypes represent idealistic images of whowe should or should not be (or aspire to be),

      building on the definition of archetypes, now we're getting to understand how they function...

    61. Unlike the individualism and manifest destiny located in Alger’s stories, theRockwellian hero celebrated consumer comfort and conformity, and located moralityin one’s becoming the proverbial cog in the machine.

      Ouch! That's a fabulously evocative image...

    62. The promise of stablework is no longer an expectation and careers are now understood as ‘‘boundaryless’

      clear link to the other reading...

    63. enterprise culture in organizations encouragesemployees to internalize the values of excellence and customer service, and tobecome an ‘‘entrepreneur of the self,’’ where the achievement of success is dictated byone’s consumerist, innovative, and youthful performance

      interesting

    64. The interest in entrepreneurship signals a sea change in the images of the‘‘organization man’’ that dominated much of the twentieth century. Characterizedby loyalty and conformity, the organization man looked to the paternalisticorganization for job security

      William Whyte, who wrote "The Organization Man" (and it was always men...) said, "This book is about the organization man. If the term is vague, it is because I can think of no other way to describe the people I am talking about.... They are the ones of our middle class who have left home, spiritually as well as physically, to take the vows of organization life, and it is they who are the mind and soul of our great self-perpetuating institutions." This is fascinating stuff -- "taking the vows" not to mention providing the "mind and soul" of our great self-perpetuating institutions. The entrepreneurial man was not lauded as the engine of the economy or even the source of one's own financial security in the mid-20th century as much as those who gave themselves over to the promise of corporate growth and the career-ladder in the mighty firms of modernity...

    65. I turnnow to identifying the archetype of the entrepreneurial man

      moving on from conceptual background to showing how these concepts are manifest over time...

    66. we might similarlyconsider the entrepreneur as a transcendent identity construct

      connects with the myths of entrepreneurship ... and the ideal figuration of heroes...

    67. archetypes have been defined as symbols that are ‘‘commonly understood and possesssimilar meanings across diverse situations

      the easier-to-understand definition...

    68. entrepreneurialism presupposes the entrepreneur as White, masculine,and otherwise privileged, and marginalizes the involvement of women and minorityentrepreneurs (Ahl, 2004).

      identity politics ... socially constructed out of communication (discourse!)

    69. archetypes

      this paper is all about archetypes!

    70. Entrepreneurs do not have to work in an organization in order to be influenced byorganizational discourse.

      obviously...

    71. the archetype has been defined as anatavistic, patterned, and universal symbolic image rooted in shared understandingsand representative of influential and desirable values and ideas.

      initial definition of archetype - mostly helpful for explaining the hero archetype (and therefore linking it to last week's theme -- the (heroic) entrepreneurial figure who is both influential and embodies desirable values [and qualities])

    72. To frame the study at hand, I first introduce archetypes as idealizedmanifestations of organizational identity. Second, I introduce the entrepreneurialman archetype as reflective of today’s new economy. Finally, I provide a historio-graphical overview of the self made and organization man archetypes before movingto a discussion of methods

      really nice synopsis -- tell the reader what's about to come, and then do it. Clear structure.

    73. entrepreneurialism today is not ahistorical butgains hegemonic influence by selectively drawing from previous individualistarchetypes.

      all righty then! That's a thesis statement...

    74. To contextualize*and thereby texturize*neoliberal entrepreneurialism

      aha - texturize means contextualize. Huh.

    75. he preference for theindividual in the development of capitalism, where the deemphasis on family andcommunity left individuals searching for leadership and meaning, for which theyturned to the authoritarian or managed state, including organizations.

      sounds right... Whereas the entrepreneurial individual still thrives in capitalism but tends to turn away from managerial relationships and institutions in the search for meaning...

    76. shaping individualsinto enterprising selves

      I like this term. It's filled with promise and pitfalls alike...

    77. Examining the meshing of the self made, organization, and entrepreneurialarchetypes provides insight into how entrepreneurialism taps into already formedcultural ideologies so as to be compelling

      the trajectory, the rationale...

    78. seek to texturizeentrepreneurialism by tracing the evolution of individualist archetypes in the US

      cool ... could be a thesis statement if everyone understood what "texturize" meant here...

    79. provide a tempered, nuanced understanding for the shift from organization man toentrepreneurial man.

      Gill's mission with this article...

    80. entrepreneurship and neoliberalismare productively, and also problematically, entwined

      yep

    81. ‘boundaryless careers’

      also the "gig economy" ... where you have no (institutional) job security and have to be working (or prepared to work all the time). At the same time, you have the "freedom" to work from wherever (not constrained to a 9-5 ritual or a particular place).

    82. neoliberal ideology has fostered a cultof the individual that eschews a collective mindset and discounts collaborative orcommunity-centric practice. Instead, the private individual is idealized as the soleagent in her or his life and community

      neoliberalism ... the force pulling the strings, so to speak, in entrepreneurial culture...

    1. researchers have failed to understand en-trepreneurship as a struggle with failure

      (a theme we have touched upon in weeks 1 & 2 already...)

    2. optimistic attachments theyhave to neoliberal ideals such as the promise of meritocracy and in-dividualism are unlikely to come to pass in their lives.

      The fully agentic entrepreneur believes that reality will meet them on their terms. For most though, according to this study, reality has to be met and negotiated on its terms. What's cruel about this is that the more some seek to make it happen, the less likely it will (as the "shadow" takes over and blocks out the light).

    3. certain types of entrepreneurial en-deavor, especially that performed by YouTubers, encourages a self-centered subjectivity where individuals pursue their own self-interestby seeking popularity at all costs

      This seems fairly straightforward. But other "certain" types of entrepreneurial endeavour (like those we'll examine in the next few weeks) clearly do not have this focus. A lot of the side-hustle discourse, however, seems deeply rooted in this kind of self-centred promotionalism...

    4. Second, their creativity isconstrained by the conformism that the neoliberal logic of hyper-nor-mality tends to promulgate.

      2 - coveting the success of others leads to the desire to emulate it. Distinctness recedes, and hyper-normativity rules... there are still rules that have to be played by

    5. we found a worldquite different from the upbeat optimism of most literature on en-trepreneurial capitalism. While the, probably unwitting, circulation ofneoliberal ideals among participants in the ethnography has certainlybeen effective at making them more entrepreneurial, the impact ontheir personal lives is altogether less sanguine.

      remember at the beginning when they mentioned "cruel optimism"? This is a recognition that the hopeful and upbeat optimistic attitude of the wide-eyed (and willing to do whatever it takes to succeed) entrepreneur inevitably meet a reality that isn't quite so open to possibility. If you don't struggle to succeed, you won't succeed. But for some, all they're left with is the struggle...

    6. ven successfulentrepreneurs, who are as unwittingly influenced by neoliberal ideals asthe next person, are still plagued by psychological and emotional angst

      key observation

    7. First, they are obsessedwith their marketability and the performance of their quantifiableselves —especially when compared to their closest rivals.

      1 - competition breeds narcissism. This is a pillar o the illusion of freedom.