Abstract

The aim of this work is to provide, through a bibliometric analysis of the last 30 years of thematic literature, an overview on the contribution of social enterprises to the achievement of global goals.A bibliometric method has been used to analyze the characteristics, citation patterns and content of 3318 documents published in international academic journals, books review and chapters, editorial material and proceedings papers.Considering our findings, the bibliometric analysis has shown that there are journals that have had a greater production on the topic with an impact on research. Thanks to the work of the most impactful authors, it emerges that the case study is the most used method to demonstrate the centrality of social enterprises in social innovation. The analysis also shows that the centrality of the themes is linked to innovation, impact, management and performance, demonstrating the assumption that the driver of innovation in terms of social impact is given by these types of companies. The research also shows the keyword evolution through the years.Through the coding activity, it has also been possible to demonstrate that by transposing the global sustainability objectives to the local that the more in-depth ones are addressed on the issues of sustainable economy and fair, responsible and sustainable innovation, while there is much shortcoming regarding the achievement of gender equality, sustainable water management but even more on the reduction of inequality between nations. The latter is probably conditioned by the more global target and therefore not easily approachable to social enterprises.Research limitations/implications – The study shows a limitation, related to the adoption of the bibliometric method. However, it considers books review, chapters, papers published in international and academic journals, editorial materials, reviews and proceedings papers.Originality/value – This research shows that the interest on SDG and social enterprises has grown continuously in the last 30 years, especially in the last 5. The literature puts social enterprises at the center of social innovation by focusing on performance and management issues. Therefore, with the intention of mapping the studies that have been done in this regard, the study analyzed how research on local development coherence for global development has been addressed.

Highlights

  • Sustainable development, in the last 10 years has emerged as an influential, yet controversial, concept for business and policy

  • Starting from the "Independent Group of Scientists appointed by the Secretary-General, Global Sustainable Development Report 2019: The Future is – Science for Achieving Sustainable Development, (United Nations, New York, 2019).", this study aims to identify how social enterprises acts in promoting the effective functioning of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  • It is perceivable that the journals that are being analysed are strictly related to SDG 17 – PARTNERSHIP FOR THE GOALS and SDG 13 – CLIMATE CHANGE, SDG 9 - INDUSTRY, INNOVATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE and SDG 8 – DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH

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Summary

Introduction

Sustainable development, in the last 10 years has emerged as an influential, yet controversial, concept for business and policy. Before that period literature and interest on the specific topic was quite scarce. Among these years, entrepreneurship has been interpreted as the vehicle of transformation to sustainable products and processes, even if there is still uncertainty regarding the nature of entrepreneurship's role in the area of sustainability and how it may unfold. Starting from the "Independent Group of Scientists appointed by the Secretary-General, Global Sustainable Development Report 2019: The Future is – Science for Achieving Sustainable Development, (United Nations, New York, 2019).", this study aims to identify how social enterprises acts in promoting the effective functioning of the SDG. Governments and the public sector as well as the stakeholders and the enterprises too as a whole must use the SDGs as a basis for developing the public implementation (Farneti et al 2019). The SDGs are embedded and framed in public governance, and their realization will strongly depend on it; the formulation of the SDGs may refer to different levels of commitment, but still: public administration is everywhere in the SDGs (Bouckaert, Loretan, e Troupin 2016)

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