“…(Eversole and Eastley, 2011: 43–44)A further finding was that, even within a single Australian cultural and regulatory context, these social enterprises did not share any single organisational form or legal structure. Organisations calling themselves social enterprises, and meeting the definition of mission-led organisations that trade, included incorporated associations, companies limited by guarantee, sole proprietorships, cooperatives, and a number of other legal forms that are found across the broader Tasmanian context (Eversole and Eastley, 2011: 25). As has been documented elsewhere (Barraket et al., 2010: 26, 37), legal structure is not a good predictor of social enterprise status in Australia; rather, the legal structures used by social enterprise overlap with those of private companies and of not-for-profit organisations.…”