“…Source: compiled by authors (According to Alter, 2007;Grassl, 2012;Defourny and Nyssens, 2017;Eldar, 2017;Szymanska & Jegers;2016, Pestoff, 2014 Social Enterprises are broadly called as hybrid organizations: "mishmash" of legal forms (Young, 2012;Eldar, 2017), mixture of different stakeholders (Szymanska & Jegers, 2016), various combination of resources and institutional logics (Defourny & Nyssens, 2017), interplay between profit and social impact objectives (Besley & Ghatak, 2017), activities combining the characteristics of social work and business (Artcer et al, 2016), creating blended value, which includes both social and financial outcomes (Dao et al, 2017). Nevertheless, hybridity as an integration of different logics is a source of innovation (Vickers, I., 2017) and a driver to competitiveness, sustainability, efficiency and professionalization (Pestoff, 2014;Kim et al, 2020).…”