- Social innovation
Social innovation refers to new
strategies ,concepts ,ideas andorganizations that meetsocial needs of all kinds - from working conditions andeducation tocommunity development andhealth - and that extend and strengthencivil society .Over the years, the term has developed several overlapping meanings. It can be used to refer to social "processes" of innovation, such as open source methods. Alternatively it can be used to innovations which have a
social purpose - likemicrocredit or distance learning. The concept can also be related tosocial entrepreneurship (entrepreneurship isn't always or even usually innovative, but it can be a means ofinnovation ) and it also overlaps with innovation inpublic policy andgovernance . Social innovation can take place withingovernment , within companies, or within thenonprofit sector (also known as the third sector), but is increasingly seen to happen most effectively in the space between the three sectors.History
Social innovation was discussed in the writings of figures such as
Peter Drucker andMichael Young (founder of theOpen University and dozens of other organizations) in the 1960s. [see for example Gavron, Dench eds "Young at 80", Carcanet Press, London, 1995 for a comprehensive overview of one of the world's most successful social innovators] . It also appeared in the work of French writers in the 1970s, for example Pierre Rosanvallon, Jacques Fournier, andJacques Attali [ Chambon, J.-L, David, A. and Devevey, J.-M (1982), Les Innovations Sociales, Presses Universitaires de France, Paris ] . However, the themes and concepts in social innovation have existed long before that.Benjamin Franklin , for example, talked about social innovation in terms of small modifications within the social organisation of communities [ [http://www.leaonline.com/doi/abs/10.1207/S15326934CRJ1402_11 Mumford, M.D. (2002) Social Innovation: Ten Cases from Benjamin Franklin, Creativity Research Journal, 14(2), 253-266] ] that could help to solve everyday problems. Many radical 19th centuryreformers likeRobert Owen , founder of the cooperative movement, promoted innovation in the social field and all of the great sociologists includingKarl Marx ,Max Weber andÉmile Durkheim focused much of their attention to broader processes ofsocial change . However, more detailed theories of social innovation only became prominent in the 20th century.Joseph Schumpeter , for example, addressed the process ofinnovation more directly with his theories ofcreative destruction and his definition of entrepreneurs as people who combined existing elements in new ways. In the 1980s and after, writers on technological change increasingly addressed the importance of social factors in affecting technology diffusion [ notably in the writings ofChristopher Freeman , Carlotta Perez, Ian Miles and others]Recent developments
The idea of social innovation has become much more prominent with ongoing research,
blogs and websites (such as the social innovation exchange) [www.socialinnovationexchange.org ] , and a proliferation of organisations working on the boundaries of research and practical action. Several currents have converged in this area, including:* new thinking about innovation in public services, pioneered particularly in some of the Scandinavian and Asian countries. Governments are increasingly recognising that innovation isn't just about
hardware : it is just as much about prisons andhealthcare , schooling anddemocracy . [ [http://www.strategy.gov.uk/work_areas/innovation/index.asp Innovation in the Public Sector] an overview of thinking about innovation in the public sector, published by the UK government's Strategy Unit in 2003 ] [ [http://www.youngfoundation.org.uk/node/576 Ready or Not?] published by The Young Foundation in 2007 about the need for public sector organisations to innovate]
* growing interest insocial entrepreneurship . [see for example Nichols; "Social Entrepreneurship, Oxford University Press 2007"]
* business, which is increasingly interested in innovation in services. [ [http://www.forbes.com/2006/05/08/innovation-design-services-cx_tvr_0508design.html design companies] article by forbes magazine about how comanies are innovating in the way they offer services]
* new methods of innovation inspired by the open source field. [ [http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/5544.html Innovation in open source] article by harvard business school about innovation in open source]
* linking social innovation to theory and research in complex adaptive systems to understand its dynamics. [Westley,Zimmerman and Patton; "Getting to Maybe;Toronto, Random House 2006"]A recent overview of the field highlighted the growing interest of public policy makers in supporting social innovation in these different sectors, notably in the UK, Australia, China and Denmark. [Mulgan, Ali, Tucker; "Social innovation: what it is, why it matters, how it can be accelerated, published by Said Business School, Oxford, 2007"] A focus of much recent work has been on how innovations spread [various studies by Greg Dees and others and the study published by NESTA "In and out of sync: growing social inovations, London 2007"] and on what makes some localities particularly innovative. ["Transfomers" published by NESTA, London, 2008]
History of Social Innovation and territorial development
There is another extensive literature on social innovation in relation to territorial (or regional) development, which covers: first, innovation in the
social economy , i.e. strategies for satisfaction of human needs; and second, innovation in the sense of transforming and/or sustainingsocial relations , especially thegovernance relations at the regional and local level. A combination of both the modes provides a comprehensive approach to innovation in social and economic dynamics withinterritories . InEurope , from the late 1980s, research on social innovation from a territorial perspective was initiated by [http://www.unites.uqam.ca/econos/BiblioLaville.htm Jean-Louis Laville] [ Laville, J.-L. (Ed.) (1994) L’économie solidaire, une perspective internationale, Desclée de Brouwer, Paris ] andFrank Moulaert [ [http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/openurl.asp?genre=article&eissn=1360-0591&volume=37&issue=3&spage=289 Moulaert, F. and Sekia, F. (2003) Territorial Innovation Models: a Critical Survey, Regional Studies, 37(3), 289-302] ] and has been going on since then. InCanada [http://www.crises.uqam.ca/pages/en/ CRISES] initiated this type of research. The first large scale research project to work on territorial innovation analysis was SINGOCOM [http://users.skynet.be/bk368453/singocom/index2.html Social Innovation, Governance, and Community Building] aEuropean Commission Framework 5 project (2002-2004), that offered wide ranging discussions on Alternative Models for Local Innovation (ALMOLIN).ome noted scholars
*
Jean-Louis Laville
*Frank Moulaert
*Geoff Mulgan
*Michael D. Mumford
*Abraham George
*Akhtar Hameed Khan ee also
*
civil society
*KATARSIS Project
*post fordism
*public administration
*social entrepreneurship
*Bidah (Islamic concept ofinnovation inreligion )
*KaosPilots_NL
*The Young Foundation References
External links
* [http://www.socialinnovationexchange.org The social innovation exchange - SIX]
* [http://www.the-hub.net The Hub - global network of social innovation building spaces]
* [http://www.sereporter.com/article.php?a=416 "Enterprising Social Innovation: the most intriguing form of social entrepreneurship"] , Greg Dees and Beth Anderson
* [http://www.discoversocialinnovation.org/ENGLISH/index.php Discover Social Innovation] , a collaboration of theChina Centre for Comparative Political Economy ,British Council andYoung Foundation
* [http://eaepe.org/eaepe.php?q=node/view/30 Research Area "O" Economy, Society and Territory] from theEuropean Association for Evolutionary and Political Economy Journals
* [http://www.ssireview.org The Stanford Social Innovation Review]
* [http://www.riseproject.org The Research Initiative on Social Entrepreneurship] Columbia Business School
* [http://www.hbs.edu/socialenterprise/publishedwork.html Social Enterprise Initiative] Harvard Business School
* [http://www.mitpressjournals.org/loi/itgg Innovations: Technology, Governance, Globalization] from MIT
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