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The nature and origins of social venture mission: An exploratory study of political ideology and moral foundations
Institution:1. Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SnT), University of Luxembourg, 29, Avenue John F. Kennedy, 1855, Luxembourg, Luxembourg;2. University of Bergamo, Department of Management, Information and Production Engineering, via Pasubio 7b, 24044 Dalmine, Italy;3. University of Bergamo, Department of Management, Via dei Caniana, 2, 24127 Bergamo, BG, Italy;4. Trier University, Faculty of Management, 54296 Trier, Germany;5. Erasmus School of Economics, Erasmus University Rotterdam, P.O. Box 1738, 3000 DR Rotterdam, the Netherlands;1. Rawls College of Business, Texas Tech University, USA;2. College of Business, Colorado State University, USA;3. Ivey Business School, Western University, Canada;4. Gustavson School of Business, University of Victoria, Canada
Abstract:Although organizational mission is central to social venturing, little is known about the nature and origins of social ventures' missions. In particular, the field lacks a framework for understanding the moral content of nascent ventures' “prosocial” missions that rely on quite different—and potentially conflicting—moral values. We engage in an exploratory study, drawing on moral foundations theory and upper echelons theory to develop framing questions related to the moral discourse in social venture missions and the role of founders' political ideology in relation to this moral discourse. We construct a novel dataset using computer-aided text analysis on the mission statements of over 50,000 nascent nonprofit ventures in the United States, supplemented by voter registration data from 17 states and Washington, D.C. Our findings reveal rich nuance in the moral discourse found in organizations' mission statements. Furthermore, founding teams' political ideologies are strongly associated with the moral discourse in their social ventures' stated missions—and in ways that differ intriguingly from findings in moral psychology at the individual level. We draw on these new insights to develop a roadmap for future research on organizational mission in relation to social venturing, moral markets, mission drift, and political ideology.
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