SOCIAL enterprises have been proliferating in India as a result of the benefits of growth not being evenly distributed and large numbers of people continuing to be left behind. With governments failing to deliver development and the private sector being primarily focused on profitability, which it has to be, the responsibility for bridging the gaps has fallen on changemakers and innovators.
Social entrepreneurship can vary in size and purpose. It can be the small neighbourhood school opened for the children of construction labour or it could be a large foundation that trains government teachers across the country. It could be. . .