Upgrading of social innovation studies

2021 ◽  
pp. 47-65
Author(s):  
Nikolai Genov
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 2796 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Dijk ◽  
Joop de Kraker ◽  
Anique Hommels

The upscaling of innovations from urban experiments is often assumed to be relatively easy, as if they can simply be ‘rolled out’. In practice, however, upscaling is usually constrained by a range of factors in the wider context of the innovation, typically a context of interconnected and ‘obdurate’ urban socio-technical networks and institutions. Innovation studies have used the notion of upscaling from experiments most explicitly in studies of transitions, especially of strategic niche management (SNM) and transition management (TM). However, these studies have focused more on niche internal dynamics and future visions, respectively, and much less on constraints in the present socio-institutional context. This paper offers a conceptual contribution on ‘constraints on upscaling’, elaborating on how upscaling can be more effective when constraints on upscaling are first identified in retrospective systems analysis, and then anticipated in the design of urban experiments. Our focus is on innovation in urban mobility systems. After a conceptualization of ‘constraints on upscaling’, based on a review of the literature of transition, social innovation, geography and science & technology studies, we present a retrospective analysis of urban mobility in Maastricht (NL) in which these interrelated constraints can be recognized. Further, we analyze a pilot on electric bus mobility which was relatively successful in anticipating future constraints. Based on this, we offer some guidelines on how to anticipate upscaling in the design of urban experiments with socio-technical innovations.


Author(s):  
Nadia von Jacobi ◽  
Alex Nicholls ◽  
Daniel Edmiston ◽  
Attila Havas ◽  
Klaus Kubeczko ◽  
...  

This chapter addresses key issues that public policy seeking to support social innovation faces. Combining theoretical insights of the Extended Social Grid Model with empirical results obtained from EU policy surveys and case studies, it identifies key policy implications and recommendations. It first introduces key notions for social innovation policy, including the multifaceted landscape into which support is inserted; the necessity to recognize its political character; to what extent insights from business innovation studies can be useful; and why successful support of social innovation must imply institutional change. The chapter then outlines a series of recurrent policy dilemmas such as whether horizontal support should be preferred; the trade-off between degree and costs of marginalization that wish to be targeted; the difficulty to promote a capability to associate; and how the subsidiarity principle may clash against the need to overcome marginalizing processes.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Niamh Ní Bhroin

Twitter presents new opportunities for individual communication.  Consequently, it may be a relevant arena in which to address the social need of minority language maintenance.  The Indigenous Tweets website presents a directory of minority language users on Twitter (www.indigenoustweets.com).  It aims to create new opportunities to use these languages, thus to address a social need through media innovation.  In this article, I draw on a theoretical framework from Media Innovation- and Social Innovation Studies, to delineate the concept of Social Media-Innovation.  I propose three distinguishing attributes.  Firstly, users of these innovations must consider them relevant to address identified social needs. Secondly, the communication capabilities they present must support addressing these needs.  Thirdly, they should facilitate mediated interaction that enhances society’s capacity to act.  Having delineated the concept I explore how its attributes are manifest in practice with reference to the case of Indigenous Tweets.  I find that the relevance of Indigenous Tweets is negotiated with regard to culturally specific needs in different social contexts.  The development and use of its communication capabilities are supported by incremental experimentation and learning.  Furthermore, while it facilitates mediated interactions that are designed to enhance society’s capacity to act, these occur in a hybrid media context and are influenced by the range of agents involved.  This article makes two important contributions to the field of Media Innovations Studies.  It delineates the concept of Social Media-Innovation according to three central attributes.  It also analyses how these are manifest in practice with reference to the case of Indigenous Tweets.


2021 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. e5269
Author(s):  
Luz Andrea Cote ◽  
Emilio Ricci

Los estudios teóricos y bibliométricos realizados sobre la innovación social (IS) indican con frecuencia que, pese al protagonismo que ha ganado en las estrategias de organismos multilaterales y en las estructuras gubernamentales y las políticas públicas de una diversidad de países, el campo adolece de claridad conceptual e investigativa. La falta de revistas especializadas y redes de coautoría habrían incidido en esta situación. A nivel internacional, el enfoque de la IS ha sido marcado principalmente por Europa y Norteamérica, regiones en las que la investigación y la publicación científica se han visto estimuladas por el ascenso del término en programas de desarrollo. No obstante, en Latinoamérica, la IS ha tenido sus propias características y merece un tratamiento con marcos conceptuales pertinentes. Social Innovation Studies (SIS) busca reunir la atomizada publicación latinoamericana en la materia y convocar a los autores de la región para entablar un diálogo internacional basado en un análisis de la realidad regional que aborde un amplio espectro, desde enfoques micro sustentados en análisis de casos, hasta enfoques macro que relacionen la IS con los grandes procesos de cambio social.


2016 ◽  
Vol 45 (9) ◽  
pp. 1923-1935 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert P. van der Have ◽  
Luis Rubalcaba

Author(s):  
Derya Fındık ◽  
Erdal Akdeve ◽  
Gülsen Kaya Osmanbaşoğlu

The authors aim at revealing themes in this research field throughout the years between 1970 and 2016 by using the terms of social innovation and collaboration together. They apply co-citation analysis to find out the theoretical foundations of this recently emerged field. Thus, they obtain six clusters with different attributes, such as cross-sector partnerships in social innovation, the definition of social innovation, transition studies, social entrepreneurship, innovation studies, and inter-organizational relations.


2020 ◽  
pp. 144078332096455
Author(s):  
Nikolai Genov

The guiding idea of this analysis concerns the development of social innovation theory on the paradigmatic basis of the social interaction concept. The aims of the discussion are three-fold. First, the central task is to elaborate on a multidimensional concept of social innovation, defined as organized social change. Second, the development of the social innovation concept is used to evaluate the heuristic potentials of the sociological paradigm of social interaction. Third, the paradigm of social interaction and its capacities to guide the structuration, functioning and development of knowledge about social innovations are put under close scrutiny. The conclusion is that the suggested disciplinary paradigm of sociology and the new concept of social innovation facilitate the explanatory approach to relevant social phenomena, the overcoming of theoretical and methodological dilemmas in sociology and the systematic building up of cumulative sociological knowledge.


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