Researching the social economyedited by Laurie Mook, Jack Quarter, and Sherida Ryan.
- Toronto [Ont. : University of Toronto Press, (c)2010.
- 1 online resource (xviii, 335 pages) : illustrations, digital file.
Includes bibliographical references.
What's in a Name? / A Portrait of the Ontario Social Economy / The Social Economy in Quebec: Towards a New Political Economy / The Social Economy in Europe: Trends and Challenges / A Comparative Analysis of Voluntary Sector-Government Relations in Canada and England / Capturing Complexity: The Ontario Government Relationship with the Social Economy Sector / Notes in the Margins: The Social Economy in Economics and Business Textbooks / Mandatory High School Community Service in Ontario: Assessing and Improving its Impact / Strategic Partnerships: Community Climate Change Partners and Resilience to Funding Cuts / The Online Social Economy: Canadian Nonprofits and the Internet / Corporate Participation in the Social Economy: Employer-supported Volunteering Programs / Work Stoppages in Canadian Social Economy Organizations / Organic Farmers and the Social Economy: Positive Synergies for Community Development / On the Challenges of Inclusion and the Co-operative Movement for Francophone Immigrants in Ontario / Laurie Mook, Jack Quarter, and Sherida Ryan -- David M. Lasby and Michael H. Hall -- Marguerite Mendell and Nancy Neamtan -- Roger Spear -- Peter R. Elson -- Kathy L. Brock -- Daniel Schugurensky and Erica McCollum -- Paulette Padanyi, Mark Baetz and Steven D. Brown and Ailsa Henderson -- Travis Gliedt, Paul Parker and Jennifer Lynes -- Sherida Ryan -- Agnes Meinhard, Femida Handy and Itay Greenspan -- Kunle Akingbola -- Jennifer Sumner and Sophie Llewelyn -- Ginette Lafrenière.
The contributions to this volume, flowing from an inter-regional and international network of scholars and community organizations, analyze how the social economy, in its many manifestations, interacts with and shares commonalities with organizations in the other sectors of the economy. Taken as a whole, Researching the Social Economy enriches our understanding of how this important cluster of organizations contributes to Canadian society in both economic and social terms, and lays the groundwork for future study."--Pub. desc. "Researching the Social Economy is one of the first comprehensive research collections on the social economy in Canada. While the term "social economy" is used widely is Western Europe and Quebec, it has had minimal currency in English Canada, where the differences between the public and private sectors and among nonprofits, co-operatives, social enterprises, and community economic development organizations have been emphasized.