Doctoral Seminar in Social Entrepreneurship and Philanthropy (SEPHI)
| Credits |
|---|
| 5 |
| Holder |
| Prof. Frédéric Dufays (HEC Liège – ULiège) and Prof. Virginie Xhauflair (HEC Liège – ULiège) |
| Language |
| English |
| Location |
| ESSEC Business School |
| Field |
| Innovation/Entrepreneurship (I/E) |
Course Description
Format: Face-to-face
The seminar will gather about 20 doctoral students from different countries working at the intersection between social entrepreneurship and philanthropy.
Our goal:
• to support junior scholars (PhD students, postdoctoral fellows, and junior faculty) working and developing research in the areas of civil society, philanthropy, and social innovation.
• to increase the sense of intellectual community and enhance the overall quality of their research in management, economics, sociology, political science, philosophy, history, and other fields in the humanities and social sciences.
We are open to a wide variety of perspectives and topic areas including, but certainly not limited to, the following:
• Alternative ownership and governance models;
• Artificial intelligence, tech ventures and platforms “for good”;
• Collective social entrepreneurship processes;
• Corporate philanthropy, corporate social responsibility, and other business initiatives;
• Cross-sector partnerships, collective impact, collaboration of multiple stakeholders;
• Decision-making processes and criteria in grantmaking foundations;
• Democratic organizations and the democratization of the economy;
• Elites, capitalism, and plutocratic tendencies in civil society;
• Hybrid organizations (e.g. B-Corps) and the challenges of hybrid organizing;
• Impact investments, social impact bonds, blended finance, and other hybrid funding;
• Impact measurement and management and its consequences;
• Legal and fiscal frameworks encouraging or impeding civil society;
• Political innovation and initiatives to foster democracy and political change;
• Social movements, protests, and advocacy groups;
• Systems thinking, systems change, and its funding challenges;
• Tainted money, dirty gifts, and the ethical dilemmas in fundraising;
• Trust-based philanthropy and the power asymmetry between funders and grantees.
Submission details:
Interested candidates should send their research material and an academic CV in attachment to an email motivating their participation:
• For the early-stage track (1st to 3rd year PhD students): please send an extended abstract (1,000-3,000 words) outlining your ongoing research and what you would most like feedback on.
• For the advanced track (final year PhD, postdoctoral students, assistant professors): please send a full-length paper not currently published (we accept manuscripts under review or undergoing revisions) on which you want to receive detailed feedback.
.
Schedule
Academic Year 2025-2026
The SEPHI seminar will not be organized this academic year