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1. Reinvention of hybrid business enterprises for social good

By Eric W. Orts


On 1 August 2013, Delaware became the nineteenth state in the United States to adopt a version of a benefit corporation statute, which is designed to expand the range of legitimate purposes undertaken by business firms to include the interests of employees, environmental sustainability, and other nontraditional social goals beyond the traditional objective of profit-making for owners and investors. The event is noteworthy and perhaps a watershed moment in business history because Delaware sets the compass for US corporate law. More than half of publicly traded companies in the United States are incorporated in Delaware, and approximately two-thirds of the Fortune 500 are Delaware corporations. The adoption of the statute was also accompanied by a record number of immediate re-incorporations, including the well-known home goods retailer Method Products (supported by venture capital from European-based Ecover and San Francisco’s Equity Partners). More than a dozen other companies became Delaware benefit corporations as well.

Delaware joins an increasing number of US states which previously adopted versions of benefit corporation statutes, including the commercially important states of California (where clothes retailer Patagonia became the first registrant), Illinois, New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. The United Kingdom adopted a similar corporate option in the form of the Community Interest Company, which was first authorized by national statute in 2004. Other countries around the world have also adopted legal variations of “hybrid” business forms that straddle the boundary between “for-profit” and “nonprofit” organizations. Delaware’s embrace, however, signals that this movement may have historical staying power.

business school

As one who teaches in a prominent business school, I perceive a potential generational change in among students who are highly committed to business careers, but who are disillusioned by the narrow financial focus of “maximizing shareholder value” at all costs. These students are motivated by values that extend beyond the scope of augmenting their own personal wealth and advancing their own self-interests. The excesses of Wall Street that caused the worst global financial meltdown since the Great Depression have helped to fuel the disillusionment of this next generation of business leaders. I find heartening examples of Wharton students and those from many other business schools who are pursuing careers in which they are seeking to be a “part of the solution” to global problems, as well as finding opportunities to make a good living for themselves. The legal recognition of new business forms that allow for hybrid combinations of profit-making and social purpose suggest that idealistic pioneers – such as Ben & Jerry’s and Patagonia – may have begun to find traction in terms of changing the “rules of the game” and the basic assumptions of the motivating purposes of business enterprise, at least for a nontrivial part of the global economy.

The path for these new models of business will not be easy. Most probably, it will be difficult for many “hybrid” enterprises to contend with traditional competitors that continue to focus only on one “bottom line” of profitability. Legal recognition of new forms of “hybrid social enterprises,” however, may smooth the road for starting up these new business experiments. One might even imagine a gradual acceleration of business success if consumers begin to climb aboard (as they have done with other firms that have convincingly proclaimed “social good” as a part of their mission) and if new capital accumulation methods (such as the “crowdfunding” that has recently been approved for selective investors in the United States) begin to vie with traditional investment and financial markets.

In a world beset by increasingly worrisome problems of sustainability, economic inequality, and other major social issues, a shift of business models that may allow them to become stronger forces for social good will be most welcome. Delaware’s new statute may spark new research into how best to support and structure these new “hybrid social enterprises” in the future, and signal a new era in which the purpose of business enterprise is reconceived to include a broader and more diverse array of choices and missions than narrow financial theories have considered.

Eric W. Orts is the author of Business Persons: A Legal Theory of the Firm, which presents a foundational legal theory of business firms which is the first to embrace and explain the potential of benefit corporations and other “hybrid social enterprises.” Eric Orts is the Guardsmark Professor of Legal Studies and Business Ethics at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He is also a Professor of Management, faculty director of the Initiative for Global Environmental Leadership, and faculty co-director the FINRA Institute at Wharton. He will be a visiting professor at INSEAD in France in the fall of 2013.

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Image credit: group of young people at business school. © cokacoka via iStockphoto.

The post Reinvention of hybrid business enterprises for social good appeared first on OUPblog.

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2. Affected by Hurricane Sandy? First Book Can Help You Get New Books.

First Book and Hurricane Sandy relief

Click here (or on the flyer above) to sign up! Feel free to share this link, or download the graphic and share.

 

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3. on the street where we lived






This afternoon, we took the journey back in time—to a riverfront lunch and then to our first home, 19 Burns Road, Ashburne Hills. My father bought this house in 1957 for $14,000 with help from the GI bill; he put ten percent down.  My brother and I were born here, played in a sandbox out back, waited for my father to come home from his crazy hours at the Marcus Hook plant where, as a chemical engineer, he helped thwart fires, build a catalytic converter, and manage the flares on the stacks that are depicted here, behind him, as he drove. 

Some years have gone by since then, maybe a few.  But in so many ways, he hasn't changed a bit.

The owners were in.  They let us roam around.

5 Comments on on the street where we lived, last added: 5/7/2012
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4. Summer sketchbookings.

This summer I have been the busiest I have ever been which is why my sketchbook is fairly empty these days. Sure, there are sketches and thumbnails but 90% of them are work related so I can not post them here (plus they are rough, incoherent, and boring). I rarely find time to sit and sketch leisurely these days but I have had a few chances this summer...

The first three here are from Philadelphia's Penn's Landing on the eve of Independence Day, during the fireworks.




Below are sketches from Delaware while on vacation with Virginia, Daisy, and her family.


For those of you who are not aware, a sunfish is a small sail boat.
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5. Creepy Kid.



My Mother and Father in law own a small mobile home in a trailer park on the Rehoboth Bay in Delaware. While they only use it for vacation purposes there are some that live in the park permanently and I have concluded that those people are from another planet.

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6. Sketching in Delaware.


I didn't draw much while on vacation in Delaware. I always have the intention to (I bring a lot of art supplies with me) but I find that I do more reading especially when I am at the beach. Honestly, I don't really like the beach. I am a mountain and trees person simply because there's something to look at other than a horizontal line all day (aka, the ocean). We did see several large pods (10 or more in each) of dolphins this year which was quite exciting and something I have never seen in the wild before.

Anyway on the 3rd day there Daisy needed to pick up some maternity shirts at the outlets (she is now 20 weeks pregnant) so I tagged along with sketchbook in hand since I usually do a lot of waiting around. However, I was surprised to discover that there was a new park behind the outlets with a long hiking trail so I went off while she went shopping.

I was entertained by a songbird for a few minutes before he flew off (above) and on the way back I discovered a snake skeleton on the side of the trail (below).


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7. The Skippack School by Marguerite de Angeli


Marguerite de Angeli had The Skippack School published in 1939. It is one of the readers in the Sonlight Curriculum’s elementary American history program. I feel it should be removed from the curriculum due to its inaccurate and stereotypical portrayal of American Indians. This reader comes after a series of books told from the white settler’s point of view.

This is unfortunate because if the references to American Indians were edited it would be a nice little story about the Germans who settled in Penn’s Woods in Pennsylvania about 1750 to worship God in their own way. The Indian characters do not advance the story nor enhance the story and are treated as part of the setting.

The Skippack School is the story of the Shrawder family - Pop, Mom, little sisters and Eli. I would guess that Eli is about nine years old, but it is not made clear in the book. The German Shrawder’s settle near German Town and Eli attends Skippack School two to three days a week. He can already speak English though he had just walked off the boat. Eli is a troublemaker, but because of kind, gentle, and patient schoolmaster Christopher Dock, he begins to study and read his verses.

Eli misses school the day he is to read the Scriptures aloud (a big honor) as his mother is away caring for ill neighbors. An American Indian stops by and demands to be fed. He is a Leni-Lenape. He uses words like “Ugh” and eats like a pig. White Eagle makes a comment about Indians owning the land. It is not an accurate portrayal or even semi-realistic.

Eli must sell his handmade bench to replace the glass window he broke at school and Dock takes him to German Town for his first time there. There is a very good description of visiting the printer, if you are also reading about Ben Franklin this description enhances your other readings. There is also a scene of Indian men eating in the village square and being served by village women. Eli is told, “No child need fear the Indians here. They’ve never broken the Penn Treaty.” But the settlers farther west are “having trouble” because the Indians are forming a council to address their issues. Too bad de Angeli couldn’t have recognized it wasn’t the Indians we needed to worry about when it came to honoring a treaty.

Eli learns so much in town, that he arrives home and makes his own little book for Dock complete with a printed wood block design on the cover and colored illustrations. Master Christopher then presents Eli with a beautiful painting with a Scripture and the alphabet. I enjoyed the character of Master Christopher, if only all teachers were like him.

German Town is a neighborhood in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Here is a website where you can go if your ancestors settled in German Town. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~original13/

Marguerite de Angeli http://www.deangeli.lapeer.org/Life/index.html was born in Lapeer, Michigan in 1889 and won the Newberry Award in 1949 for Door in the Wall. In 1902, she moved with her family to Pennsylvania. When I lived in Metamora and took my young sons to the Marguerite de Angeli Library in Lapeer I would always feel sad as I drove a block or two north on M-24 and saw the For Sale sign in front of de Angeli’s Lapeer home. There is a marker denoting the house. I hope someone bought that house and preserved it.

The Leni-Lenapes are called Delaware  http://www.delawareindians.com/   and despite the Penn Treaty, their lands were taken from them and they were forced west to Ohio and continuing westward to Indiana. Some of the Delaware sided with Tecumseh and the British and fought against the encroachments of the Americans. http://www.munseedelawareindiannation-usa.us/page06.html

The Shawnee often lived with the Delaware and it is for this reason, that some of my ancestors may have been Delaware as we will never be able to prove for certain my ancestor’s tribal identity. They married caucasians and assimilated into white society and we are left with oral history only.

The Delaware were forced onto reservations in Oklahoma.

In Noblesville, Indiana (about 45 minutes north of Indianapolis), you can visit the Strawtown Koteewi Park which used to be a Delaware village in the early 1800’s. The village rested against the shores of the White River. We visited this park and met very friendly and informative archaeologists and park rangers.

http://www.co.hamilton.in.us/parks_details.asp?id=2932

Also in Noblesville is the Conner Prairie Living History Museum http://www.connerprairie.org/

This is a wonderful field trip for homeschool families. There are several historic buildings on site and a recreated Delaware Indian village. A Delaware gentleman was on hand and kindly showed me the garden with corn growing from seed passed down through the generations. He explained that they plant the corn in a circle and when the seedlings are several inches high, they plant pole beans in an outer circle. The pole beans then grow around the corn. The corn was at least twelve feet high. He also showed my daughter a Delaware game played with sticks.

On site we also saw a Civil War reenactor and buildings hosted by costumed interpreters. One of my daughter’s favorite stops was a petting barn where many of the farm animals were not in their pens! The young cow simply rested on the barn floor and enjoyed having her muzzle petted.

If you do read The Skippack School, please supplement with trips such as I described above and with readings about the Delaware Indian. Please try to give your children as much of the whole story as possible.

      

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