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Social Entrepreneurship in Deprived Areas of Amsterdam

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... schools, broadcasting associations, sport clubs, hospitals, shops, etc. ... Edited by Carlo Borzaga and Jacques Defourny. London & New York 2001 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Social Entrepreneurship in Deprived Areas of Amsterdam


1
Social Entrepreneurship in Deprived Areas of
Amsterdam
Economic Development Department Social
Development Department
  • Dr. Isabel J. Gallin,
  • Procesmanager, Social Development Department
  • City of Amsterdam
  • The Learning Network - Milan
  • Friday, February 11th, 2005

2
The Amsterdam Experience
  • Content
  • From Third Sector to Social Enterprise
  • The Dutch Tradition Pillarisation and Welfare
    state
  • Ethnic Entrepreneurship
  • Empowerment
  • Situation in Amsterdam
  • Social Entrepreneurship and Local Development

3
The Third Sector
Public
Private
1970s Third Sector Co-operatives, Associations,
Mutual Societies
Non Profit Sector / Social Economy
4
Non-Profit Sector
  • Tax exemption as a key criterion (USA)
  • For cross-national comparative purposes
  • Formal
  • they have a certain degree of institutionalisatio
    n (presupposes a legal personality)
  • Private
  • Distinct from both state those organisations
    issuing directly from the public authorities
  • Self-governing
  • They have their own regulations decisions
    making bodies
  • Non-distribution constraint
  • They cannot distribute profits to either their
    members, their directors or a set of owners
  • Voluntary contribution
  • Some level of voluntary contribution founded
    on free and voluntary affiliation of their members

5
Social Economy
  • 1. Legal / institutional
  • Co-operative style enterprises
  • Mutual type organisations
  • Associations
  • 2. Normative
  • Serving members of the community rather than
    generating profit
  • Independent management
  • Democratic decision making process
  • Primacy of people labour over capital in
    distribution of income
  • usually combinations of both approaches

6
Social Economy or Non-Profit Sector?
  • Points of divergence ? Social economy approach
  • Specification of goals
  • ? Serve members of the community rather than to
    seek profit
  • Non Proft Not explicit as to the goals of the
    organisation
  • Control over the organisation
  • ? The requirement of a democratic decision-making
    process
  • Non Profit No formal democratic requirement
  • Use of profits
  • ? Redistribute a part of the surplus to the
    members
  • Non Profit prohibits any profit distribution and
    thus excludes the entire co-operative component
    of social economy
  • Dynamics emergence of social enterprises?

7
Social Economy Social Enterprises
  • Non-Profit Sector Social Economy

New entrepreneurship Social enterprises
8
EntrepreneurshipCriteria of Innovative Behaviour
  • Entrepreneurs are responsible for introducing
    changes in at least one of the following ways
  • New product / quality of product
  • New production method
  • Opening of a new market
  • Acquisition of a new source of raw materials
  • Reorganisation of a sector / activity

9
Enterprises which may be called social
  • New economic trends in their behaviour are
    compatible with explicit social dimensions if
  • They benefit the community or target groups
  • Purposes of the activity ? requirement for the
    production surplus to be socialised /
    reinvested in the development of the activity /
    used for the benefit of people other than those
    who control the organisation
  • Non-commercial resources
  • Broad mobilisation of resources across the
    society (non-monetary, voluntary work, donations)
  • Particular organisational methods
  • Democratic decision-making process, members
    involved in management

10
Criteria of Social Enterprises
  • Economic / entrepreneurial dimensions
  • Continuous activity producing goods and / or
    selling services
  • High degree of autonomy
  • Significant level of economic risk
  • Minimum amount of paid work
  • Social dimensions
  • Explicit aim to benefit the community
  • Initiative launched by a group of citizens
  • Decision-making power not based on capital
    ownership
  • Participatory nature, which involves the persons
    affected by the activity
  • Limited profit distribution

11
Definition of Social Enterprises EMES-network
  • Purpose of activity
  • Non-commercial resources
  • Particular organisational methods

12
The Dutch Situation
  • NL has the largest non-profit sector in the world
    in terms of employment (1995)
  • ? 12
  • or 670.000 full-time jobs in education,
    healthcare welfare
  • Comparison
  • ? United Kingdom 6,2
  • ? Germany 4,9
  • ? France 4

13
How come?
  • Pillarisation
  • groups of citizens organised themselves along
    religious political lines
  • Catholics, Protestants, Liberals, Socialists and
    others
  • Emancipation of different population groups
  • Not confined to the non-profit sector
  • political parties, labour unions, housing
    associations, newspapers, schools, broadcasting
    associations, sport clubs, hospitals, shops, etc.
  • All kinds of service providing organisations
    were set up along the lines of the pillars,
    financed by collective arrangements

14
Have we got social enterprises in Amsterdam?
  • The Dutch Welfare state
  • All-encompassing approach of Dutch government
    leaves little room for independent local
    initiatives
  • Almost no project can meet the complete set of
    entrepreneurial and social criteria defining
    social enterprises

15
Ethnic entrepreneurship
  • General notions
  • Stimulation of (deprived) areas
  • Stimulates participation to society
  • Enhances creativity dynamism in an area
  • Bridge between present location and land of
    origin
  • Facts
  • Quota for migrants is lower than for non-migrants
  • But growth is much higher for migrants
  • 2nd generation chooses entrepreneurship more
    often than 1st generation
  • Differences more Turkish and Chinese
    entrepreneurs than Moroccan, Surinam, Antillean
    or African

16
Ethnic Entrepreneurship in NL
  • Not a big issue no specific policies
  • Monitors
  • Preconditions
  • Remove barriers for (ethnic) entrepreneurs
  • Empowerment
  • strengthening position of inhabitants in social,
    physical, cultural, mental and economic respects

17
Amsterdam City Center
Total population 79.919 inhabitants January 1,
2004
18
Amsterdam within the Ring A10
Total population 439.847 inhabitants
19
City of Amsterdam
Total population 738.763 inhabitants
20
Deprived Areas of Amsterdam
  • Parts of
  • West - Parkstad
  • Campus New West
  • DOude Huygens
  • Southeast
  • Social venture competitions
  • Arena
  • Entrepreneurial houses
  • North
  • VEBAN, VMBO Business Schools, RABA,
  • Bredero College, Shell area

21
Conclusions
  • Definition debate
  • Narrow interpretation of social enterprise, less
    attention on the non-profit sector that provides
    the preconditions (welfare, healthcare, housing,
    education etc.)
  • Empowerment as a policy / an instrument
  • Goal is to enable inhabitants of Amsterdam to
    participate to society
  • to grow from social entrepreneurs to
    entrepreneurs
  • Social enterprise
  • Focus on the enterprise part, potentials, chances

22
Thank you for your attention!
  • Acknowledgements
  • Mr. Drs. Edwin A. Oskam,
  • Economic Development Department, City of
    Amsterdam
  • Mr. Dr. Piet H. Rennoy,
  • Regioplan Policy Research
  • Further reference
  • The results of the EMES-network are published
    in
  • The Emergence of Social Enterprise,
  • Edited by Carlo Borzaga and Jacques Defourny
  • London New York 2001
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