Authors
Michael J Roy, Rachel Baker, Susan Kerr
Publication date
2017/1/1
Journal
Social Science & Medicine
Volume
172
Pages
144-152
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
This paper focuses on the role of actors that operate outside formal health systems, but nevertheless have a vital, if often under-recognised, role in supporting public health. The specific example used is the ‘social enterprise’, an organisation that seeks, through trading, to maximise social returns, rather than the distribution of profits to shareholders or owners. In this paper we advance empirical and theoretical understanding of the causal pathways at work in social enterprises, by considering them as a particularly complex form of public health ‘intervention’. Data were generated through qualitative, in depth, semi-structured interviews and a focus group discussion, with a purposive, maximum variation sample of social enterprise practitioners (n = 13) in an urban setting in the west of Scotland. A method of analysis inspired by critical realism – Causation Coding – enabled the identification of a range of explanatory …
Scholar articles
MJ Roy, R Baker, S Kerr - Social Science & Medicine, 2017