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E-grāmata: Creating Economic Space for Social Innovation

Edited by (Professor of Social Entrepreneurship, University of Oxford), Edited by (Head of Research, GETIDOS, UniversitƤt Greifswald)
  • Formāts: 480 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Dec-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192566249
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  • Cena: 126,01 €*
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  • Formāts: 480 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Dec-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192566249

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This book draws upon economic and sociological theory to provide a comprehensive discussion of economic space for social innovation, addressing especially marginalized groups and the long-term projects, programmes, and policies that have emerged and evolved within and across European states. It approaches the explanatory and normative questions raised by this topic via a novel approach: the Extended Social Grid Model (ESGM). Taking inspiration from the fields of economic sociology and ethics, this model shows that social innovation processes must be structural, and require change in power relations, if marginalization is to be effectively dealt with via social innovation.

Part I of the book sets out the ESGM, including an exposition on the model along with background chapters on innovation, power and marginalization, ethics and social innovation, and empirical methods. Part II explores the model with a focus on social innovation trajectories of social housing, drinking water provision, employment, education, and food provision. It also explores the operationalization of the model with a view to agency and empowerment, as well as social innovation policy in Europe and the use of social impact bonds as a tool for financing social innovation. Part III revisits the ESGM and considers the explanatory adequacy and fruitfulness of the model for innovation research and for theorizing social innovation, addressing questions on the role and limitations of participation in social innovation for the marginalized, the role of capital for creating economic space for capabilities, and how we can approach the social impact of social innovation.

This collection of essays presents a diverse range of perspectives on understanding and addressing the key issue of marginalization, and offers key recommendations for policy makers engaging with social innovation across the European Union and beyond.

Recenzijas

This worthwhile book introduces a new path with practical relevance to understanding the economic space of social innovation...The book's coverage (in particular, its historical case studies) is impressive, and remarkably, the authors acknowledge that the ESGM is just one way of using insight from innovation studies in social innovation * Judith Terstriep, Institute for Work and Technology Westphalian University Gelsenkirchen, Prometheus *

List of Figures
xi
List of Tables
xiii
List of Contributors
xv
PART I APPROACH: THE EXTENDED SOCIAL GRID MODEL
1 The Extended Social Grid Model
3(29)
Alex Nicholls
Rafael Ziegler
2 Social Innovation, Power, and Marginalization
32(18)
Risto Heiskala
3 Creating Fair (Economic) Space for Social Innovation? A Capabilities Perspective
50(30)
Rafael Ziegler
Nadia von Jacobi
4 Empirical Approaches to Social Innovation
80(29)
Georg Mildenberger
Gudrun-Christine Schimpf
Enrica Chiappero-Martinetti
Nadia von Jacobi
PART II DATA: EXPLORING THE MODEL
5 Trajectories of Social Innovation: Housing for All?
109(40)
Gudrun-Christine Schimpf
Georg Mildenberger
Susanne Giesecke
Attila Havas
6 Trajectories of Social Innovation: Water for All?
149(26)
Gudrun-Christine Schimpf
Rafael Ziegler
7 Trajectories of Social Innovation: Tackling Marginalization with a Complex Approach
175(33)
Gydrgy Molndr
Attila Havas
8 Trajectories of Social Innovation: Education
208(17)
Martijn Jeroen van der Linden
9 Creating Alternative Economic Spaces: The Socially Innovative Practices of Solidarity Purchasing Groups
225(20)
Lara Maestripieri
10 Social Innovation and Agency
245(23)
Nadia von Jacobi
Enrica Chiappero-Martinetti
Rafael Ziegler
Martijn van der Linden
Cees van Beers
11 Social Innovation Policy in the European Union
268(32)
Alex Nicholls
Daniel Edmiston
12 Public Policy as Social Innovation: Social Impact Bonds
300(41)
Alex Nicholls
Daniel Edmiston
PART III IMPLICATIONS FOR THEORY AND PRACTICE
13 The Extended Social Grid Model Revisited
341(22)
Rafael Ziegler
Alex Nicholls
Jari Aro
Cees van Beers
Enrica Chiappero-Martinetti
Daniel Edmiston
Attila Havas
Risto Heiskala
Nadia von Jacobi
Klaus Kubeczko
Martijn Jeroen van der Linden
Lara Maestripieri
Georg Mildenberger
Gyorgy Molndr
Gudrun-Christine Schimpf
14 Capital and Capacities: Using Capital to Create Economic Space for Capacities
363(26)
C. W. M. (Ro) Naastepad
15 The Impact of Social Innovation
389(28)
Alex Nicholls
Nadia von Jacobi
Enrica Chiappero-Martinetti
Georg Mildenberger
16 Social Innovation Policy
417(32)
Nadia von Jacobi
Alex Nicholls
Daniel Edmiston
Attila Havas
Klaus Kubeczko
Gyorgy Molndr
Georg Mildenberger
Gudrun-Christine Schimpf
Index 449
Alex Nicholls is Professor of Social Entrepreneurship at SaĆÆd Business School, University of Oxford. He is also a Tutorial Fellow and Member of the Governing Body at Harris Manchester College, University of Oxford, and in 2004 he was the first staff member of the Skoll Centre for Social Entrepreneurship. He has published six books and over a hundred papers, working papers, book chapters, and articles, including seven papers in Financial Times Top 30 journals. He has been the General Editor of the Skoll Working Papers Series and is the Editor in Chief of the Journal of Social Entrepreneurship.

Rafael Ziegler coordinates the Social Entrepreneurship Research Group GETIDOS at the University of Greifswald and the Institute for Ecological Economic Research in Berlin. He is the Editor of An Introduction to Social Entrepreneurship: Voices,Preconditions, Contexts (Edward Elgar 2009). His focus is on social innovation in relation to water, justice, and sustainability.