Article

Assembling social enterprise: how and why social movements become part of the state apparatus

Details

Citation

Teasdale S, Curtin M, Roy M & Baird C (2026) Assembling social enterprise: how and why social movements become part of the state apparatus. Public Management Review. https://doi.org/10.1080/14719037.2026.2666386

Abstract
This article explores why revolutionary social movements eventually become part of the state apparatus. Centring upon the case of the historical evolution of Scotland’s social enterprise ecosystem using the lens of assemblage thinking, we reframe the ecosystem as a shifting configuration of actors, values, organizations, and policies shaping desire for social change. We demonstrate how heterogeneous coalitions redefine what counts as social enterprise, with consequences for public value. The article advances public management scholarship by problematizing a structural tension between the values of social movements: in our case autonomy and collective self-help and democratic commitments to openness and inclusivity.

Keywords
Assemblage; social enterprise; Scotland; social entrepreneurship; community business; collaborative governance; social movement

StatusEarly Online
FundersUniversity of Stirling
Publication date online30/04/2026
Date accepted by journal21/04/2026
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/37996
ISSN1471-9037
eISSN1471-9045

People (1)

Professor Michael Roy

Professor Michael Roy

Prof Social Innovation & Sustainable Org, Management, Work and Organisation

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