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How social ventures successfully mobilize resources

Social ventures are a powerful force for socioeconomic development and self-determination around the world. However, resource scarcity places severe constraints on their impact. Existing literature has not yet adequately explored several key aspects of this phenomenon, leading to limited applicabili...

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Main Author: Goetze, Lauren
Other Authors: Meyer, Camille
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Goetze, Lauren
author2 Meyer, Camille
author_browse Goetze, Lauren
Meyer, Camille
author_facet Meyer, Camille
Goetze, Lauren
author_sort Goetze, Lauren
collection Thesis
description Social ventures are a powerful force for socioeconomic development and self-determination around the world. However, resource scarcity places severe constraints on their impact. Existing literature has not yet adequately explored several key aspects of this phenomenon, leading to limited applicability and effectiveness of current theory. This research endeavors to answer the central question: How do social ventures leverage different resourcing strategies to overcome resource scarcity? Related lines of inquiry are included to answer the sub-questions: What are the implications of different resource mobilization strategies? What effect does context have on social ventures' resource mobilization strategies? By developing four organizational case studies across two countries that have successfully mobilized resources, this study builds understanding of what resource mobilization strategies are most effective. The analysis of the qualitative data followed the abductive approach and aligned with the constructivist paradigm. This method allowed for the centering of participants' perspectives, and exploration of the process of resource mobilization. The findings highlight social capital as the most impactful and widely applicable resource mobilization strategy. After applying the Social Cohesion Perspective to the data, it was evident that two divergent approaches to social capital are present among the cases, with one approach centering bonding and bridging social capital, and the other relying on linking social capital. While both approaches have distinct tradeoffs, linking social capital dependence is shown to fuel a chain reaction of mission drift and degradation of bonding and bridging social capital. Meanwhile, strong networks of bonding social capital, combined with bridging social capital, facilitate continued mission alignment and organizational adaptability. Additionally, this later strategy contributes to increased utilization of bricolage practices to mobilize resources. Finally, the complex effects context exerts on social capital are outlined, showing particularly strong impacts on bonding and linking social capital. This research contributes to theory by expanding the Social Cohesion Perspective, outlining key implications of different resource mobilization strategies which highlight the importance of diversified resource bases. The findings also show that dependence on linking social capital leads organizations towards a potentially hazardous sequence of events driven by mission drift. Further expansion on this theory includes the effects of context on various forms of social capital as well as the process of resource mobilization, and bricolage's ties to social capital.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:21.255Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
publisherStr Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42244 How social ventures successfully mobilize resources Goetze, Lauren Meyer, Camille Zolfaghari, Badri social ventures socioeconomic development self-determination Social ventures are a powerful force for socioeconomic development and self-determination around the world. However, resource scarcity places severe constraints on their impact. Existing literature has not yet adequately explored several key aspects of this phenomenon, leading to limited applicability and effectiveness of current theory. This research endeavors to answer the central question: How do social ventures leverage different resourcing strategies to overcome resource scarcity? Related lines of inquiry are included to answer the sub-questions: What are the implications of different resource mobilization strategies? What effect does context have on social ventures' resource mobilization strategies? By developing four organizational case studies across two countries that have successfully mobilized resources, this study builds understanding of what resource mobilization strategies are most effective. The analysis of the qualitative data followed the abductive approach and aligned with the constructivist paradigm. This method allowed for the centering of participants' perspectives, and exploration of the process of resource mobilization. The findings highlight social capital as the most impactful and widely applicable resource mobilization strategy. After applying the Social Cohesion Perspective to the data, it was evident that two divergent approaches to social capital are present among the cases, with one approach centering bonding and bridging social capital, and the other relying on linking social capital. While both approaches have distinct tradeoffs, linking social capital dependence is shown to fuel a chain reaction of mission drift and degradation of bonding and bridging social capital. Meanwhile, strong networks of bonding social capital, combined with bridging social capital, facilitate continued mission alignment and organizational adaptability. Additionally, this later strategy contributes to increased utilization of bricolage practices to mobilize resources. Finally, the complex effects context exerts on social capital are outlined, showing particularly strong impacts on bonding and linking social capital. This research contributes to theory by expanding the Social Cohesion Perspective, outlining key implications of different resource mobilization strategies which highlight the importance of diversified resource bases. The findings also show that dependence on linking social capital leads organizations towards a potentially hazardous sequence of events driven by mission drift. Further expansion on this theory includes the effects of context on various forms of social capital as well as the process of resource mobilization, and bricolage's ties to social capital. 2025-11-18T07:06:50Z 2025-11-18T07:06:50Z 2025 2025-11-17T13:55:35Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42244 en eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle social ventures
socioeconomic development
self-determination
Goetze, Lauren
How social ventures successfully mobilize resources
thesis_degree_str Master's
title How social ventures successfully mobilize resources
title_full How social ventures successfully mobilize resources
title_fullStr How social ventures successfully mobilize resources
title_full_unstemmed How social ventures successfully mobilize resources
title_short How social ventures successfully mobilize resources
title_sort how social ventures successfully mobilize resources
topic social ventures
socioeconomic development
self-determination
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42244
work_keys_str_mv AT goetzelauren howsocialventuressuccessfullymobilizeresources