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Corporate Foundations as Hybrid Organizations: A Systematic Review of Literature

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2026

Theresa Gehringer*
Affiliation:
Center for Philanthropy Studies, University of Basel, Steinengraben 22, 4051 Basel, Switzerland
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Abstract

The rise and global reach of the corporate foundation (CF) phenomenon has attracted the attention of academic researchers and practitioners and led to a plurality of definitions and understandings. This definitional fuzziness notwithstanding, the term hybridity is widely used as the defining characteristic to describe a CF’s position between business and civil society and its diverse interlinkages with its founding company. However, the extant literature has seldom explained what hybridity signifies, when it occurs and how it is shown. This paper presents the findings of a systematic review of the academic and gray literature on CFs. Based on 80 publications covering 30 countries worldwide, this study proposes 15 characteristics along four global themes as a comprehensive set to account for the complexity of CFs. It develops propositions for a fine-grained understanding of what constitutes the hybrid nature of CFs at the strategic, organizational and contextual levels. Accordingly, this study suggests ways forward by revealing questions that require further research toward a better understanding of the CF phenomenon.

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Type
Research Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
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Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2021
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Number of CF-related publications per year

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Fig. 2 Most studied countries in CF scholarship by frequency [NA = North America; SA = South America]

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Fig. 3 Research process

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Fig. 4 Attribute space of CFs

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Fig. 5 Establishment theme, with the percentages of coverage in the sample

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Fig. 6 Organizational capabilities theme, with the percentages of coverage in the sample

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Fig. 7 Purpose theme, with the percentages of coverage in the sample

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Fig. 8 Outcome theme, with the percentages of coverage in the sample

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Table 1 Perception of hybridity in the extant literature on CFs

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Fig. 9 Connection table of the attribute space of CFs (rows) and the three hybridity levels (columns); the 54 manifestations are marked with a color code based on the number of publications that relate to them at each hybridity level

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