TY - JOUR
T1 - Sentimental Drivers of Social Entrepreneurship
T2 - A Study of China's Guangcai (Glorious) Program
AU - Yiu, Daphne W.
AU - Wan, William P.
AU - Ng, Frank W.
AU - Chen, Xing
AU - Su, Jun
PY - 2014/3
Y1 - 2014/3
N2 - Social entrepreneurship plays an important role in local development in emerging economies, but scholars have paid little attention to this emerging phenomenon. Under the theory of moral sentiments, we posit that some entrepreneurs are altruistically motivated to promote a morally effective economic system by engaging in social entrepreneurial activities. Focusing on China's Guangcai (Glorious) Program, a social entrepreneurship program initiated by China's private entrepreneurs to combat poverty and contribute to regional development, we find that private entrepreneurs are motivated to participate in such programs if they have more past distressing experiences, including limited educational opportunities, unemployment experience, rural poverty experience, and startup location hardship. Their perceived social status further strengthens these relationships. Our study contributes to the social entrepreneurship literature by offering a moral sentiment perspective that explains why some entrepreneurs voluntarily join a social entrepreneurship program to mitigate poverty in society.
AB - Social entrepreneurship plays an important role in local development in emerging economies, but scholars have paid little attention to this emerging phenomenon. Under the theory of moral sentiments, we posit that some entrepreneurs are altruistically motivated to promote a morally effective economic system by engaging in social entrepreneurial activities. Focusing on China's Guangcai (Glorious) Program, a social entrepreneurship program initiated by China's private entrepreneurs to combat poverty and contribute to regional development, we find that private entrepreneurs are motivated to participate in such programs if they have more past distressing experiences, including limited educational opportunities, unemployment experience, rural poverty experience, and startup location hardship. Their perceived social status further strengthens these relationships. Our study contributes to the social entrepreneurship literature by offering a moral sentiment perspective that explains why some entrepreneurs voluntarily join a social entrepreneurship program to mitigate poverty in society.
KW - Moral sentiments
KW - Personal experience
KW - Social entrepreneurship
KW - Social status
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84897767133&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/more.12043
DO - 10.1111/more.12043
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84897767133
SN - 1740-8776
VL - 10
SP - 55
EP - 80
JO - Management and Organization Review
JF - Management and Organization Review
IS - 1
ER -