Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 1062804
Reflexive Ethnography in Transition: Social Enterprise in Croatia
Reflexive Ethnography in Transition: Social Enterprise in Croatia // Social entrepreneurship in South East Europe. Three Countries Analyses / Šimleša, Dražen (ur.).
Zagreb: Institut društvenih znanosti Ivo Pilar, 2019. str. 63-84
CROSBI ID: 1062804 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
Reflexive Ethnography in Transition: Social Enterprise in
Croatia
Autori
Stubbs, Paul ; Vidović, Davorka
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Poglavlja u knjigama, znanstveni
Knjiga
Social entrepreneurship in South East Europe. Three Countries Analyses
Urednik/ci
Šimleša, Dražen
Izdavač
Institut društvenih znanosti Ivo Pilar
Grad
Zagreb
Godina
2019
Raspon stranica
63-84
ISBN
978-953-7964-53-5
Ključne riječi
ethnography ; social enterprise ; social entrepreneurship
Sažetak
This text explores the added value of reflexive ethnography for exploring social enterprise in Croatia. We treat ethnography as much, if not more, as a ‘sensibility’ than a ‘methodology’, in the process delinking ethnography somewhat from its anthropological roots and addressing its broader importance as a tool for critical social scientific accounts of complex social practices and social relations. In a post- communist, fast-changing, transition context such as Croatia, researchers on social enterprises inevitably are also enrolled as policy consultants, advisors, advocates, and practitioners, forming close relationships with a small number of social enterprise pioneers. This text revisits the work of a Croatian social enterprise ACT Group, based in Čakovec in the north-west of Croatia which, in less than a decade, evolved from a single NGO to a Consortium consisting of eight different entities. The paper attempts to explore the reasons for ACT Group’s relative success, the specificities of its organisational topography and leadership style, its diversification of activities to engage local resources and address the needs of specific communities, its ability to ‘jump scale’ and play a key role in steering the development of social entrepreneurship in Croatia, and the absence of support from, and partnership with, key segments of local government. The text attempts to combine researchers’ understandings of the organisation with the leader of the organisation’s view of researchers, in an attempt to explore some of the ethical dilemmas and multiple possibilities of ethnographic research into social enterprise in the future.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Sociologija, Interdisciplinarne društvene znanosti
POVEZANOST RADA
Ustanove:
Ekonomski institut, Zagreb,
Fakultet političkih znanosti, Zagreb