Description
Module content
This module introduces core concepts, frameworks and theories of transformative entrepreneurship. As part of this module, you will: consider the core ideas of ‘prosperity thinking’ in relation to contemporary responses to socioeconomic and environmental crises (such as green growth, degrowth, sustainable development goals); learn about the emergence and forms of social entrepreneurship; understand entrepreneurship as an institution, intervention, policy and practice; study concepts and theories relevant for analysing the transformative potential of entrepreneurship (such as community-based enterprise, effectuation, frugal innovation, institutional theory, social movements); explore the promise and limits of transformative entrepreneurship to provoke institutional and structural change in different settings, including extreme and diverse global contexts (e.g. displacement, migration, poverty, violence); and finally, how to evaluate the potential of transformative entrepreneurship to both advance more equitable, inclusive societies and address global challenges. The learning process includes a range of online materials, classes, teaching cases, as well as individual and group research work.
Illustrative module outline
- Introduction: Concepts, definitions, emergence, forms
- Why transformative entrepreneurship? Global challenges and prosperity
- Entrepreneurship: Institution, intervention, policy or practice?
- Entrepreneurship: Innovation and transformative change
- Social entrepreneurs: Metaphors and motivations
- Social innovation and measuring social impact
- Transformative enterprise: Inclusivity, poverty and prosperity
- Extreme contexts and the limits of transformative enterprise
Module deliveries for 2024/25 academic year
Last updated
This module description was last updated on 19th August 2024.
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