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Babita Bhatt
Researcher at Australian National University
Publications - 21
Citations - 475
Babita Bhatt is an academic researcher from Australian National University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sharing economy & Social entrepreneurship. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 14 publications receiving 307 citations. Previous affiliations of Babita Bhatt include IE University.
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Social Entrepreneurship in Non-munificent Institutional Environments and Implications for Institutional Work: Insights from China
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors unpack four types of institutional challenges to social entrepreneurship, as perceived by social entrepreneurs: norms of a strong role for government; misunderstood or unknown role for social enterprises; non-supportive rules and regulations; and lack of socio-cultural values and beliefs in support of social goals.
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The Enabling and Constraining Effects of Social Ties in the Process of Institutional Entrepreneurship
TL;DR: In this article, the authors employ a social network perspective as a "meso-level" lens into the space where actors and their environment intersect, and propose that social ties can serve as an important factor in enabling and constraining institutional change.
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The Transformative Power of Knowledge Sharing in Settings of Poverty and Social Inequality
TL;DR: In this article, the authors find that boundary work performed by boundary spanners overcomes external and internal boundaries by creating space for action, observation and reflection in the recipient community, which then facilitates further boundary work, resulting in community transformation.
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Leveraging ICT to Overcome Complementary Institutional Voids: Insights from Institutional Work by a Social Enterprise to Help Marginalized
TL;DR: This paper inquire the case of a social entrepreneurial venture in India that identified two complementary institutional voids (productive ageing void of the urban elderly and rural education void of children) and attempted to simultaneously address the two voids.
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Digital technology-enabled transformative consumer responsibilisation: a case study
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore how a socio-digital platform can facilitate consumer responsibilisation in food consumption to encourage sustained responsible consumption and uncovers its possible impacts on different stakeholders in the agricultural ecosystem.