Mind the Gap: The Potential Transformative Capacity of Social Innovation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method
3. Rationale for Social Innovation: An Elusive and Pervasive Concept
4. Towards a More Transformative and Dynamic Concept of Social Innovation
- For SI to achieve a broad transformative impact change needs to occur across scales, and from individuals to institutions, to reduce the SES vulnerability and enhance its resilience [31];
- To be durable, SI should have a measurable impact on the wider social, economic and political context that created the problem [101];
- To achieve durability of the transformation, agents need to find ways of institutionalizing the change they have created [88];
- “Achieving durability and scale is a dynamic process, which requires both emergence and opportunity and deliberate agency, and a connection between the two” [31] (p. 5);
- When innovation with high impact happens what “seemed impossible to change in the world becomes different” [101] (p. 1);
- Durability, scale and impact depend not only on the degree of engagement with the broader social context but upon engagement of a different kind, more of a disruptive encounter; the authors suggest that “scaling up” might lead to the transformation and action that will subsequently lead to the needed “disruptive encounter with power, routine and beliefs” [31] (p. 13);
- It is wiser to think of groups, as for example communities, or actor networks behind successful SI, than to depend on individuals that may (or not) have the necessary skills of (both) the institutional and the social entrepreneurs [14].
- SI emerges, “successfully”, in an initiative and amongst a group of people (communities) when they are capable of “dialectically ‘transcend’ (some) constraints (as existing institutional arrangements) of the social context within the ‘experimental space’ they create” [103] (p. 47);
- The processes of reflexive (social) learning are crucial for an initiative or network to carry on over time and space and to successfully adapt to changes in the social context [103]. DRIFT consider a social innovation as a collective of people working on objects, ideas and activities that may be socially innovative [103];
- A strategy of SI for transformative change (as for example deliberate replication, spreading principles or built networks and partnerships) to be successfully implemented depends on many factors, namely on “the skills of SI-actors in understanding (and framing) power relations and working them to their advantage” [103] (p. 81). Moreover, at the individual level, issues like individual intentions, motivation and need for relatedness, competence and autonomy are a major role [103];
- When initiatives of SI are able to expand successfully, they must then establish strategies that allow the persistence of autonomy maintenance and the engagement of external actors and institutions [103].
5. Discussion
- The mutual dependency between social innovation and social transformation. Deeper research on the relation between SI and transformation would allow to explore the apparent mutual dependency between SI and transformation, with SI creating change and transformation, with transformation also enhancing SI;
- The role of actors in social innovation. Empowerment has been identified along with learning as key issues for SI to be able to achieve transformation of system(s), therefore how and what can be the role of the actors involved in the innovations processes should be also explored in future research;
- Whether transformations may be desirable or not. The outcomes of systems transformation may not always bring desirable change, so finding whether, and when, social innovation is good or bad may need to be further explored;
- Success factors such as scale, durability and impact, have been promoted by both WISIR and DRIFT, however further evidence would benefit the understanding of why they can show successfulness in social innovation;
- Empirical demonstrative cases would help materialize what is social innovation, and bring further light to the debate. We intend to further our research through empirical cases, in the context of the TRUST project which objective is to explore forms of SI, the role it can play in transition processes to sustainability, linking to the role of actors’ networks in such processes and of agents of change to show how SI may have a transformative potential.
6. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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AUTHORS | The Young Foundation (2012) [6] | Boelman et al. (2015) [8] | Wigboldus (2016) [77] |
---|---|---|---|
SI TYPOLOGIES | New products | New services and products | Socio-juridical innovation |
New services | New practices | Socio-cultural innovation | |
New processes | New processes | Socio-political innovation | |
New markets | New rules and regulations | Socio-ideological innovation | |
New platforms | New organizational forms | Socio-ethical innovation | |
New organizational forms | Socio-economic innovation | ||
New business models | Socio-organisational innovation | ||
Socio-technical innovation | |||
Socio-ecological innovation | |||
Socio-analytical innovation |
AUTHORS | André and Abreu (2006) [10] | Nicholls and Murdock (2012) [2] | Souza and Silva Filho (2014) [78] | Boelman et al. (2015) [8] | Howaldt et al. (2018) [3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
SI DIMENSIONS | Nature | Individual | Transformations | Framework conditions | Concepts and understanding |
Stimuli | Organisation | Novelty | Organisational outputs and societal outcomes | Addressed social needs and challenges | |
Resources and dynamics | Network/movement | Innovation | Entrepreneurial activities that produce SI | Resources, capabilities and constraints | |
Agency relation | System | Actors | Governance, networks, actors | ||
Creative and innovative means | Process | Process dynamics |
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Dias, J.; Partidário, M. Mind the Gap: The Potential Transformative Capacity of Social Innovation. Sustainability 2019, 11, 4465. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11164465
Dias J, Partidário M. Mind the Gap: The Potential Transformative Capacity of Social Innovation. Sustainability. 2019; 11(16):4465. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11164465
Chicago/Turabian StyleDias, Joana, and Maria Partidário. 2019. "Mind the Gap: The Potential Transformative Capacity of Social Innovation" Sustainability 11, no. 16: 4465. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11164465
APA StyleDias, J., & Partidário, M. (2019). Mind the Gap: The Potential Transformative Capacity of Social Innovation. Sustainability, 11(16), 4465. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11164465