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An updated quantitative analysis of Kerlin’s macro-institutional social enterprise framework

Muhammet Emre Coskun (Public Management and Policy, Georgia State University Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Atlanta, Georgia, USA)
Thema Monroe-White (Berry College Campbell School of Business, Mount Berry, Georgia, USA)
Janelle Kerlin (Department of Public Management and Policy, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA)

Social Enterprise Journal

ISSN: 1750-8614

Article publication date: 26 October 2018

Issue publication date: 25 January 2019

581

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to improve upon the initial quantitative assessment of Kerlin’s macro-institutional social enterprise (MISE) framework (Monroe-White et al., 2015) to test for the effect of country-level institutions on the social enterprise sector. Major improvements are the inclusion of the civil society variable and expansion of the culture component in the analysis.

Design/methodology/approach

By following Kerlin’s (2013) original work that draws on the theory of historical institutionalism, this paper employs multi-level regression analysis to test the effect of country-level institutional factors on organizational-level social enterprise across countries. This analysis uses new macro-level data specifically for civil society and culture components.

Findings

The initial assessment of the framework found that several country-level factors had a significant effect on the variance in the size of the social enterprise sector across countries. The analysis provided here additionally shows a significant positive influence of civil society on the size of the social enterprise sector and shows that formal institutions capture the effect of informal cultural institutions when included in the model together.

Practical/implications

This analysis provides policymakers, development actors and researchers with a better understanding of the influence of civil society on social enterprises and the interaction between formal and informal institutional underlying factors.

Originality/value

This paper’s significant contribution is the addition of civil society in the MISE analysis, which was not possible before owing to lack of data, and additional cultural analysis.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

An earlier version of this work was previously published by the authors as a book chapter with the title “An Updated Quantitative Assessment of Kerlin’s Macro-Institutional Social Enterprise Framework” in J.A. Kerlin (Ed.) Shaping Social Enterprise: Understanding Institutional Context and Influence, 1st ed. London: Emerald (Monroe-White and Coskun, 2017).

Citation

Coskun, M.E., Monroe-White, T. and Kerlin, J. (2019), "An updated quantitative analysis of Kerlin’s macro-institutional social enterprise framework", Social Enterprise Journal, Vol. 15 No. 1, pp. 111-130. https://doi.org/10.1108/SEJ-03-2018-0032

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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