This book explores social innovation and entrepreneurship in China. Focusing on selected social enterprises and processes, it addresses the question of "why China?", not in terms of military, economic or political ambitions, but in the terms of social innovation and welfare policies.
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"To understand civil society in China today, it is imperative to understand social enterprises. This book provides the first comprehensive examination of work-integration social enterprises, the organizations through which the Chinese state serves disabled people. Based on rigorous research from four different sites across the country, Wang not only reveals the way the Chinese state uses state enterprises to accomplish its goals, but also offers a useful schema to analyze the different types of state-SE relationships that emerge. She finds that social enterprises with cooperative relationships with the state of the most effective at influencing state policy." Carolyn L. Hsu, Colgate University, author of Social Entrepreneurship and Citizenship in China