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  2. Social entrepreneurship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_entrepreneurship

    Social business venture: These models are set up as businesses that are designed to create change through social means. Social business ventures evolved through a lack of funding. Social entrepreneurs in this situation were forced to become for-profit ventures, because loans and equity financing are hard to get for social businesses. [53]

  3. Social enterprise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_enterprise

    A social enterprises can be structured as a business, a partnership for profit or non-profit, and may take the form (depending on in which country the entity exists and the legal forms available) of a co-operative, mutual organisation, a disregarded entity (a form of business classification for income tax purposes in the United States), [5] a social business, a benefit corporation, a community ...

  4. List of social entrepreneurs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_social_entrepreneurs

    A social entrepreneur is an entrepreneur who works to increase social capital by founding social ventures, including charities, for-profit businesses with social causes, and other non-government organizations. These types of activities are distinct from work of non-operating foundations and philanthropists who provide funding and other support ...

  5. List of social enterprises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_social_enterprises

    This is an annotated list of social enterprises sufficiently notable to have a Wikipedia article, in alphabetical order. For quick navigation, click on one of the letters: For quick navigation, click on one of the letters:

  6. Social venture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_venture

    In the leveraged nonprofit venture the entrepreneur uses external partners for financial support in providing a public good. On the other hand, the hybrid nonprofit venture recovers a portion of its costs through sales of its goods or services. The social business venture generates profits, but rather than return those profits to shareholders ...

  7. Category:Social enterprises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Social_enterprises

    Social business; Social enterprise; Social entrepreneurship in Russia; Social entrepreneurship in South Asia; A. ... a non-profit organization.

  8. Yunus Social Business - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yunus_Social_Business

    Yunus Social Business (YSB) is a non-profit organisation with an impact-investing arm, Yunus Funds, and a corporate social-innovation consulting arm, Yunus Corporate Innovation. Both business units are based on furthering the concept of social business. YSB was co-founded by Muhammad Yunus, Saskia Bruysten and Sophie Eisenmann in 2011. Its ...

  9. Social business - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_business

    Furthermore, unlike a non-profit, where funds are spent only once on the field, funds in a social business are invested to increase and improve the business's operations on the field on an indefinite basis. Per Yunus: "A charity dollar has only one life; a social business dollar can be invested over and over again."