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  4. The tactical mimicry of social enterprise strategies: Acting ‘as if' in the everyday life of third sector organizations
 
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The tactical mimicry of social enterprise strategies: Acting ‘as if' in the everyday life of third sector organizations

Journal
Organization
ISSN
1350-5084
ISSN-Digital
1461-7323
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2016
Author(s)
Dey, Pascal  
Teasdale, Simon
DOI
10.1177/1350508415570689
Abstract
Using England as a paradigmatic case of the ‘enterprising up' of the third sector through social enterprise policies and programs, this article sheds light on practitioners' resistance as enacted through dramaturgical identification with government strategies. Drawing from a longitudinal qualitative research study, which is interpreted via Michel de Certeau's theory of the prosaic of the everyday, we present the case study of Teak, a charitable regeneration company, to illustrate how its Chief Executive Liam ‘acted as' a social entrepreneur in order to gain access to important resources. Specifically, we establish ‘tactical mimicry' as a sensitizing concept to suggest that third sector practitioners' public identification with the normative premises of ‘social enterprise' is part of a parasitical engagement with governmental power geared toward appropriating public money. While tactical mimicry conforms to governmental strategies only in order to exploit them, its ultimate aim is to increase potential for collective agency outside the direct influence of power. The contribution we make is threefold: first, we extend the recent debate on ‘productive resistance' by highlighting how ‘playing the game' without changing existing relations of power can nevertheless produce largely favorable outcomes. Second, we suggest that recognition of the potentiality of tactical mimicry requires methodologies that pay attention to the spatial and temporal dynamics of resistance. Finally, we argue that explaining the normalizing power of ‘social enterprise' without consideration of the non-discursive, mainly financial resources made available to those who identify with it, necessarily risks overlooking a crucial element of the dramaturgical dynamic of discourse.
Language
English
Keywords
Michel de Certeau
productive resistance
social enterprise
space
tactical mimicry
third sector
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Sage Publ.
Publisher place
London
Volume
23
Number
4
Start page
485
End page
504
Pages
20
URL
https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/104981
Subject(s)

social sciences

Division(s)

IWE - Institute for B...

Eprints ID
239528
File(s)
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Thumbnail Image

open.access

Name

Organization-2015-Dey-Teasdale.pdf

Size

160.4 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

fbb7b554f1b2c82121900f247044d74c

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