“…The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD, 2014), the World Bank (WB, 2017), the United Nations Organization for Education, Science and Culture (UNESCO, 2014) and the World Health Organization (WHO, 2017) have recognized social entrepreneurship as fundamental for the sustainable development of populations, since it not only generates jobs, but also addresses challenges in an innovative way and encourages the construction of fair, inclusive and democratic societies with privilege to the care of the environmental. In addition, social entrepreneurship has a relationship with social structure (Seelos et al, 2011), innovation (Mulloth, Kickul & Gundry, 2016), identity capital (Lewis, 2016), creativity (Chell, Nicolopoulou & Karatas-Özkan, 2010), social capital (Mair & Martí, 2006;Westlund & Gawell, 2012), social integration (Friedman & Desivilya, 2010), geography (Smith & Stevens, 2010), sustainable development (Seelos , Ganly & Mair, 2006), politics and values (Cho, 2006;Garrigós-Simón, González-Cruz & Contreras-Pacheco, 2016), social innovation (Sabato, Vanhercke & Verschraegen, 2017), marginalization, inequality and poverty (Mongelli & Rullani, 2017), ethics (Dey & Steyaert, 2014) and culture (Ferri, Noguera & Urbano, 2015).…”