Available Formats
Social Entrepreneurship and Neoliberalism: Making Money While Doing Good
By (Author) Carolina Bandinelli
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield International
13th December 2019
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Anthropology
338.04
Paperback
136
Width 153mm, Height 225mm, Spine 10mm
213g
Contemporary Western societies seem to be marked by a revival of ethics: virtually every actor claims to be doing something good, or even to be willing to change the world. Social innovation, sharing economy and ethical business are just few of the tags attached to this manifold cultural trend, which is indicative of the attempt to reintegrate ethical responsibility with economic conduct. But how can entrepreneurship be redefined as the best way to express ones will to change society How can people decide to actualise their desire to change how things are by means of a business Social Entrepreneurship and Neoliberalism: Making Money While Doing Good tackles these questions, offering a critical yet empathetic account of the lifeworld of young social entrepreneurs in London and Milan.
Prepare to be surprised, intellectually inspired and entertained, all at the same time. Bandinelli's highly original book represents a landmark in the studies of the social enterprise by offering a timely analysis of the under-examined practices and subjectivities of young social entrepreneurs, who believe that they can "change the world" precisely by embracing entrepreneurialism. Bandinelli places the figure of the social entrepreneur firmly at the centre of contemporary neoliberal capitalism's contradictions, thus shedding compelling light on the complex and even troubling ethical and political circumstances we all live in. -- Federica Frabetti, Senior Lecturer in Communication, Media and Culture, Oxford Brookes University
Carolina Bandinelli is a Lecturer in Media at the University of Lincoln. She has previous worked as a senior research for CREATe at Goldsmiiths College