Academic literature on the topic 'Économie sociale et solidaire – Associations'
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Journal articles on the topic "Économie sociale et solidaire – Associations"
Bélanger, Lucie, and Danielle Fournier. "Économie sociale et solidaire." Reflets: Revue d’intervention sociale et communautaire 3, no. 2 (1997): 144. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/026177ar.
Full textRichez-Battesti, Nadine. "Économie politique des associations. Transformations des organisations de l’économie sociale et solidaire, Anne Le Roy et Emmanuelle Puissant (dir.), François-Xavier Devetter, Sylvain Vatan, coll. « Ouvertures économiques », De Boeck supérieur, 2019, 264 pages." RECMA N°357, no. 3 (2020): 129. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/recma.357.0129.
Full textNirello, Laura. "Anne Le Roy , Emmanuelle Puissant , François-Xavier Devetter et Sylvain Vatan (2019), Économie politique des associations : transformations des organisations de l’économie sociale et solidaire , De Boeck Supérieur, coll. « Ouvertures économiques », Louvain-la-Neuve, 264 p." Revue Française de Socio-Économie 24, no. 1 (April 21, 2020): VI. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/rfse.024.0231f.
Full textRakotoarijaona, Narindra Hajatiana, and Oana Marina Panait. "Thématique : Économie populaire et économie sociale et solidaire." Mondes en développement 181, no. 1 (2018): 181. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/med.181.0181.
Full textLaville, Jean-Louis. "Vers une économie sociale et solidaire ?" Revue internationale de l'économie sociale: Recma, no. 281 (2001): 39. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1024020ar.
Full textColletis, Gabriel, Patrick Gianfaldoni, and Nadine Richez-Battesti. "Économie sociale et solidaire, territoires et proximité." Revue internationale de l'économie sociale: Recma, no. 296 (2005): 8. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1021859ar.
Full textParodi, Maurice. "Économie sociale et solidaire et développement local." Revue internationale de l'économie sociale: Recma, no. 296 (2005): 26. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1021860ar.
Full textMalo, Marie-Claire, and Nada Elkouzi. "Alliance stratégique et apprentissage : Collectif des entreprises d’insertion du Québec et Comité économie sociale inter-CDÉC." Nouvelles pratiques sociales 14, no. 2 (September 16, 2004): 157–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/009080ar.
Full textDraperi, Jean-François. "Pour une économie sociale, solidaire… et écologique." RECMA N° 363, no. 1 (January 21, 2022): 4–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/recma.363.0004.
Full textLallement, Michel, and Jean-Louis Laville. "Qu'est-ce que le tiers secteur ? Associations, économie solidaire, économie sociale." Sociologie du travail 42, no. 4 (October 1, 2000): 523–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/sdt.37065.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Économie sociale et solidaire – Associations"
Durand, Estelle. "Les représentations du travail dans le secteur associatif : bénévoles-salariés : étude comparative." Paris 10, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004PA100180.
Full textNowadays, the associative sector employs an increasing number of salaried workers to administrate its activities. Associations thos find themselves in an innovative situation, in which voluntary and paid workers work side by side. In order to understand the importance and meaning attributed to work in a sector where employment is not a priority, we have studied the case/representation of the work carried out by associative actors (voluntary and salaried) in a MJC (Association for youth and culture) which is unked to "l'Education Populaire". Work in such a structure takes on its true meaning and represents the innovation of an socio-economical factor within a society which is suffering from an employment "crisis"
Amblard, Colas. "Associations et activités économiques : contribution à la théorie du tiers-secteur." Versailles-St Quentin en Yvelines, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998VERS1012.
Full textSince the early eighties, associations substantially entered the economic sphere. The present economic situation situation and the state policy of + dis-commitment; led this type of organizations to search for a capital stock themselves and to fulfil some economic or even commercial activities as a consequence. An interpretation of the law dated 1st july 1901 shows that nothing is determining enough to prevent this type of groups from fulfile such activities. Contrary to a generally accepted ideas, only profit-making is legal, profit sharing between members is forbidden. The common law has admitted this practice. On a regular basis, associations are allowed to perform commercial actions. However, the common law insisted on respecting the original vocation of these groups provided by the law 1901 : desinterestedness. As a consequence, a compromise between profit and desinterestedness has been found within one and only group by imposing the primacy of social purpose over the commercial activity. This original characteristic enables these new economic actors - based not on sharing profit but on the principle of a collective and durable ownership of the results reinvested in the activity - to make economic logic and social logic based on solidarity coexist. At a macro-economic level, this new approach heralds the advents of a original movement called + social economy ; and the economic weight of which is considerable. Social economy, being free from the state or the market, is more than a precise and delimited sector. It gathers all sorts of activities, with a common will: to satisfy the +general interest; buy assuming economic responsability for social needs that neither the state or the market is in a position to take into account. Today, these + social companies ; hold hope in terms of employment and social cohesion. Therefore, it is essential for them to gain the right to exist without being threatened by the market rules which would discredit their action. The european construction must play a determining part in the recognition of these new economic agents
Meyer, Maryline. "L' organisation citoyenne : contribution au renouveau de l'économie des associations." Toulon, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004TOUL2002.
Full textThe non-profit organizations has to coordinate the social interactions between benevolent persons whose motivations are both extrinsic (reputation-based) and intrinsic (obligation-based). Theory of organizations recommends monetary incentives to sustain cooperation between rational egoists. Such prescription neglects the intrinsic motivation of philanthropic persons. Governance of non-profit organizations is based on social capital that includes trust, social norms and social network. Peer pressure enforces social norms in the community as long as behaviors are "other-regarding". But the community grows with the social needs of society and combines monetary incentives with social norms. The motivation of volunteers is endogenous: it may decrease in presence of new market coordination mechanisms. So, motivation has to be managed by fair procedures in order that the required intrinsic motivation is not crowded out
Eyengué, Aimé. "Associations en danger, Quartiers en danger : Mutations des relations entre l'Etat et les associations de quartier : à la lumière du clivage idéologique Gauche-Droite." Paris 8, 2012. http://octaviana.fr/document/177624973#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=0.
Full textThis doctoral thesis analyze sociologically the word "danger" brandished by a collective of local associations mobilized in France to claim public grants to the State, with their word of warning "Associations in danger, neighbourhoods in danger". This mobilization suggests a sociolinguistic analysis of the social problems associated with the problematic of neighbourhoods and community life, on the left-right ideological divide. It seemed relevant, in this context, to take this cleavage as a grid of reading and analysis to detect any instrumentalisations of the word "danger". Therefore, we have tried to analyze the changes in partnership reports State-Associations, in the policy of the city. This by relying on stereotypes, stigma, prejudice and social or ideological representations that underlie its reports. Among the social realities observed in this context, there is the logic of professionalization of neighbourhood associations, the logic of public subsidies of associative life, the controversies and paradoxes on the question of the "suburbs", "neighbourhoods" and funding of community life
Grandvuillemin, Sophie. "Entreprises à statut spécial et concurrence." Paris 1, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997PA010330.
Full textBecause of their special status, some firms are in a particular situation that can break equality between the competitors and disrupt the free competition. Such is the case of the public corporations and non-profit- making enterprises. These firms have an original, hybrid status which reflect both their economic character and their first calling of public or social interest. From that point of view, the fact that they are on the market may seen incongirous. However, the subject matter of the study is to show that special status and competition have close links. First of all, the special character of firms does not act as a brake upon their integration into the competitive system. At a material level, the substantive law has accepted that the enterprises of social economy and public bodies should fully compete with the profit-making enterprises. At a legal level, the access to the market implies that the enterprises submit to the competition law, despite the specificity of their status. But, as some kind of kickback, his integration of the firms into the competitive system is done to the very detriment of the special character of their status. It leads to an equalization, eliminating certain statutory advantages and constraints. Now, this equalization goes together with unspecified special status, so much so that, in some cases, a few of them can be abandoned. As to the remaining inequalities, they must be sanctioned. The competition law proves very useful there. As a law of behaviours, it seems to become a law of deeds at the origin of inequalities. The role of equality, as a condition of free competition, is on the way to being fully recognized
Fretel, Anne. "L'association entre libéralisme économique et État social : Une analyse des schèmes de justification de l'économie sociale aux XIXe et XX siècles." Paris 1, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008PA010033.
Full textVignet, Julien. "L'ambivalence des associations : du capitalisme associatif à l'espace public oppositionnel." Caen, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014CAEN1014.
Full textAssociations are often viewed as a solution to increasing (social) vulnerabilities. And yet, associations are develop an organization mode that gets closer and closer to companies’ organization mode, or are in fact providing services that would be provided by State administrations. The aim of this research is to unveil bureaucratization, stratification, commodification processes undertaken by associations and the third sector of economy – i. E. Their integration into the contemporary capitalist system. Thus, associations can also create alternatives to ordinary economic organizations. Some can even be considered close to social movements, and as such, take part in a struggle for emancipation. They come close to a way, initiated by the first socialists and perpetuated by anarchists : associationnisme
Eberspächer-Gumz, Aline Mara. "Solidarité et charité dans la question sociale : les associations en France et les ONG au Brésil." Thesis, Montpellier 3, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010MON30087/document.
Full textIt is possible to observe that in the last twenty years a new class of organizations has increased in Brazil and Western societies. This category emerged from the unifying force of the civil society. The civil society has seen that by working together in associations, with voluntary participation, it reinforces the means to achieve its objectives. In Brazil, these organizations are called the third sector, since they do not belong to the first sector (the State) or the second sector (the market); they are named NGOs (Non-Governmental Organizations). In France, these organizations are known as the social economy. This economic model was born from the association of individuals who fought for a better quality of life. This thesis presents a comparative analysis of the characteristics of third sector organizations, taking into consideration the European reality from France and the Latin America reality from Brazil, focusing theory, professional action and funding agents responsible for the operation of these organizations. This thesis presents the similarities and differences through a comparative analysis between the Brazilian and French organizations involved in social issues. This analysis provides a reflection on the role of the citizen and the government discussing the real possibilities of the social transformations engendered by the third sector
Trouvé, Hélène. "L'utilité sociale : des pratiques aux représentations : Une étude de cas dans le champ de l'insertion par l'activité économique." Phd thesis, Université Panthéon-Sorbonne - Paris I, 2007. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00226400.
Full textFraisse, Laurent. "Un parcours de recherche au coeur de la construction de l’économie sociale et solidaire : innovation, institutionnalisation et comparaison." Thesis, Paris, CNAM, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019CNAM1265.
Full textThis PhD in sociology through looks back onto a twenty-year professional research career. The first part describes my research journey, from three different angles : biographical, methodological, bibliographical. The second part of the thesis gives an overview of my research work (articles, chapters, studies) put into perspective with regard to the state of current knowledge. The first topic concerns the socio-political dimension of solidarity economy through an in-depth discussion of several concepts (local initiatives, local public spheres, the network organization of non-profit sector, conceptions of social change). In addition, social and solidarity economy as a specific object within public policies is studied at local and European levels. The second topic explores the transformations of the role of non-profit organizations in society. The current changes of contractualization and financing methods between associations and governments (public procurement and subsidies) have been the subject of qualitative and quantitative studies. The conceptual ambivalences of the notions of social utility and social innovation are highlighted. Historically claimed by non-profit representatives to emphasize the specificities of their economic activities, social utility has gradually become a criterion for extending the scope of social and solidarity economy in France. The last topic concerns early-years childcare and elderly care policies. The transition from home care for dependent elderly person to personal services is analyzed as a tangle of regulations that makes it problematic to build a quasi-market and questions the place and strategies of non-profit organizations as historical actors in the sector. The comparison, on a European scale, of local childcare systems provides additional insight into the typologies of care systems elaborated at a national level
Books on the topic "Économie sociale et solidaire – Associations"
Collette, Christine. Économie sociale et solidaire. Paris: Dunod, 2008.
Find full textEric, Dacheux, and Laville Jean-Louis, eds. Économie solidaire et démocratie. Paris: CNRS, 2003.
Find full textN, Chopart J., Neyret Guy, and Rault Daniel, eds. Les dynamiques de l'économie sociale et solidaire. Paris: Découverte, 2006.
Find full textCréateurs d'utopies: Démocratie, autogestion, économie sociale et solidaire. Gap: éditions Yves Michel, 2012.
Find full textInventing the nonprofit sector and other essays on philanthropy, voluntarism, and nonprofit organizations. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.
Find full textRéseau interuniversitaire des chercheurs en économie sociale et solidaire, ed. Réconcilier démocratie et économie: La dimension politique de l'entrepreneur en économie sociale et solidaire. Paris: Houdiard, 2010.
Find full textBéja, Alice. Le partage, une nouvelle économie? Paris: Esprit, 2015.
Find full textFavreau, Louis. Economie sociale, développement local et économie plurielle. Sillery, Qu: Presses de l'Université du Québec., 1999.
Find full textMoreau, Antoine. L' économie sociale et solidaire en Europe et dans les Amériques: Définitions et indicateurs sociaux et économiques : mieux comprendre l'évolution pour mieux agir : étude comparative internationale. Montréal: CSMO économie sociale, action communautaire, 2001.
Find full textAttac, ed. Le développement a-t-il un avenir: Pour une économie solidaire et économe. [Paris]: Mille et une nuits, 2004.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Économie sociale et solidaire – Associations"
Keller, Eileen. "Die französische économie sociale et solidaire aus deutscher Perspektive." In Frankreich Jahrbuch 2016, 13–27. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-17622-8_1.
Full textBonvalot, Hélène. "Chapitre 3. Les associations." In Économie sociale et solidaire, 69–105. Dunod, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/dunod.holcm.2015.03.0069.
Full textArchambault, Édith, and Jean-Michel Bloch-Lainé. "Chapitre 11. Associations et économie sociale et solidaire." In Refonder les solidarités, 163–74. Dunod, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/dunod.lafor.2016.01.0163.
Full textFraisse, Laurent. "Chapitre 5. Acteurs culturels et fédérations associatives." In Culture et économie sociale et solidaire, 51–61. Presses universitaires de Grenoble, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/pug.delfa.2019.01.0051.
Full textHuybrechts, Benjamin. "Économie sociale et solidaire." In Dictionnaire du commerce équitable, 94. Editions Quæ, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/quae.blanc.2012.01.0094.
Full textGirard Ferreira Nunes, Christiane. "Économie sociale et solidaire." In Dictionnaire de sociologie clinique, 215–17. Érès, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/eres.vande.2019.01.0215.
Full textHély, Matthieu. "Économie sociale et solidaire." In Dictionnaire des politiques territoriales, 187–89. Presses de Sciences Po, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/scpo.pasqu.2020.01.0187.
Full textItçaina, Xabier. "Économie sociale et solidaire." In Dictionnaire d'économie politique, 198–201. Presses de Sciences Po, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/scpo.smith.2018.01.0198.
Full textDefalvard, Hervé. "Économie sociale et solidaire." In Dictionnaire des conventions, 95–98. Presses universitaires du Septentrion, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.septentrion.14407.
Full textBoudjemai, Nardjes, and Hervé Defalvard. "Économie Sociale et Solidaire." In Dictionnaire critique de la RSE, 141–46. Presses universitaires du Septentrion, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.septentrion.6600.
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