1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910524676203321

Autore

Thompson Matthew <1982->

Titolo

Assembling Understandings : Findings from the Canadian Social Economy Research Partnerhsips, 2005-2011 / / Matthew Thompson and Joy Emmanuel

Pubbl/distr/stampa

University of Victoria Libraries, 2012

Victoria, BC : , : University of Victoria, , 2012

©2012

ISBN

9781550584592

1550584596

9781550584585

1550584588

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (167 p.)

Altri autori (Persone)

EmmanuelJoy <1955->

Disciplina

306.30971

Soggetti

Nonprofit organizations - Canada

Cooperative societies - Canada

Community development - Canada

Voluntarism - Canada

Public-private sector cooperation - Canada

Economics - Sociological aspects - Canada

Best practice

Business

Canada

Community

Cooperative

Corporate social responsibility

Economic development

Economy

Employment

Entrepreneurship

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Issued as part of the Canadian Electronic Library, Documents collection, and Canadian public policy collection.



Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (p. 139-165).

Nota di contenuto

Author biography -- Introduction -- Websites of the Canadian social economy research partnerships -- Frequently used abbreviations -- Mapping the social economy: how do we know thee? Let us count the ways -- Social enterprises and the social economy -- Co-operatives and the social economy -- The social economy and indigenous peoples -- Organizational governance and capacity -- Financing the social economy -- Enabling and enforcing the social economy through public policy -- Conclusion.

Sommario/riassunto

With Assembling Understandings, the Canadian Social Economy Hub has developed a thematic summary of the CSERP outputs, exploring some of the dominant crosscutting themes within the research findings. This approach is very similar to a grounded theory approach wherein the authors, while reviewing the various available documents, ‘listened’ to the data for emerging themes. Care was taken to engage with the work from multiple angles, taking note of both diversity and unity within the body of research. The challenge in this form of research was for the authors to construct each chapter based on what was covered in the research as opposed to the expanse of what can be covered under each theme. In this way, the overall picture provided here is not a complete analysis of Canada’s social economy landscape, but rather provides an overview of the CSERP research findings in the following thematic areas: Mapping, Social Enterprise, Co-operatives, Indigenous Peoples, Organizational Governance & Capacity, Social Finance, and Public Policy. Each thematic area had representation in over 50 CSERP projects, with some chapters involving as many as 85 relevant research products. As a result, Assembling Understandings is a useful reference point for both reviewing the available CSERP documents and identifying where further research may be required.