﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><marc:record xmlns:marc="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim" xmlns:grid="http://www.tempuri.org/dsONE.xsd"><marc:leader>00000nam##2200000#a#4500</marc:leader><marc:controlfield tag="001">045302</marc:controlfield><marc:controlfield tag="003">SLIM21</marc:controlfield><marc:controlfield tag="005">20260611031700.0</marc:controlfield><marc:controlfield tag="008">260611s                     0000 00eng d</marc:controlfield><marc:datafield tag="100" ind1=" " ind2=" "><marc:subfield code="a">Aisha Rashed Al Thabahi</marc:subfield></marc:datafield><marc:datafield tag="245" ind1="0" ind2="0"><marc:subfield code="a">A Bibliometric Analysis on Social Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship Performance in Emerging Economies from 1986 to 2023</marc:subfield><marc:subfield code="c">Aisha Rashed Al Thabahi</marc:subfield></marc:datafield><marc:datafield tag="500" ind1="0" ind2="0"><marc:subfield code="a">In  Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Emerging Economies 2026-01-01 [Vol. 12 Issue. 1].  2026-01-01.
</marc:subfield></marc:datafield><marc:datafield tag="520" ind1="0" ind2="0"><marc:subfield code="a">This study undertakes a bibliometric analysis to explore how research on social entrepreneurship (SE) and social innovation has evolved in emerging economies between 1986 and 2023. Although SE has attracted increasing global attention for its role in tackling socio-economic challenges, its development within emerging market contexts is still not well understood. By tracing thematic shifts, intellectual undercurrents and influential contributors, this review pays particular attention to the role of entrepreneurial orientation (EO) in shaping SE practices, especially in environments marked by institutional gaps and limited resources. Drawing from 738 articles indexed in the Scopus database, the study analyses patterns in co-authorship, citation trends, keyword clusters and bibliographic connections. Notably, the findings show an uptick in SE-related publications after 2015, with Sustainability emerging as a key journal and Universitat de València leading institutional contributions. However, there remains a stark underrepresentation of research grounded in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia and Latin America. The analysis offers both a synthesis of current trends and a roadmap for future inquiry, emphasising the need for more regionally grounded, context-sensitive scholarship on EO in SE.</marc:subfield></marc:datafield><marc:datafield tag="650" ind1="0" ind2="4"><marc:subfield code="a">Performance</marc:subfield><marc:subfield code="a">Bibliometric Analysis,</marc:subfield><marc:subfield code="a">social entrepreneurship in emerging economies,</marc:subfield><marc:subfield code="a">social innovation,</marc:subfield></marc:datafield><marc:datafield tag="700" ind1=" " ind2=" "><marc:subfield code="a">Aisha Rashed Al Thabahi</marc:subfield></marc:datafield><marc:datafield tag="978" ind1=" " ind2=" "><marc:subfield code="a">NAENGRM045302</marc:subfield><marc:subfield code="f">Y</marc:subfield></marc:datafield></marc:record>