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CONFERENCE ON SOCIAL INNOVATION AND SOCIAL POLICY EXPERIMENTATION European Commission DG EMPLOYMENT Brussels, Crown Plaza Hotel 26 November, 2012 Elements of a Social Innovation Strategy for the EU Josef Hochgerner Zentrum für Soziale Innovation. Why SOCIAL Innovation ?.
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CONFERENCE ON SOCIAL INNOVATION AND SOCIAL POLICY EXPERIMENTATION European Commission DG EMPLOYMENT Brussels, Crown Plaza Hotel 26 November, 2012 Elements of a Social Innovation Strategy for the EU Josef Hochgerner Zentrum für Soziale Innovation
Why SOCIAL Innovation ? Social change, development,crisis and ‚Grand Challenges‘:Resources and solutions Evolution of Brains Innovative Technologies Social Innovations >> Cultural Evolution Collaborative intelligence & intelligent collaboration
WHY SOCIAL INNOVATION NOW ? Innovations embedded in social change „Brave New World“: Optimisation of human bevaiour in social systems – 20th century The most famous steam engine - Optimised by James watt, 1776 Standardisation Weak ties in social relations: ‚Flexibility‘ Acceleration ‚speed kills‘ Pressures Work-load „Humans by Design“: Optimisation in the 21st c.? „Work-Life Balance“
Theoretical considerations An analytical definition of „Social Innovation“*) ‚Social innovations are new practices for resolving societal challenges, which are adopted and utilized by the individuals, social groups and organizations concerned.‘ Distinction between idea and implementation:an idea becomes an innovation in the process of social implementation – it changes and improves social practices ... with reference to Schumpeter: They are »New combinations of social practices« *)Zentrum für Soziale Innovation, 2012: „All innovations are socially relevant“ ZSI-Discussion Paper 13, p. 2,
The making of social innovation The „4-i process“: • Ideation >> What‘s the issue, what could be the solution? • Intervention >> Conceptualisation, find methods and allies • Implementation >> Overcoming resistance, stakeholders, life cycle! • Impact >> Not necessarily ‚good‘, nor for the whole of society Ideation Intervention Implementation Impact • Three perspectives to analyse objectives and impact: • the „social demand“ perspective, • the „societal challenges“ perspective, and • the „systemic change“ perspective. • Agnès Hubert et al. (BEPA – Bureau of European Policy Advisors) • „Empowering people – driving change. Social Innovation in the European Union.“ • http://ec.europa.eu/bepa/pdf/publications_pdf/social_innovation.pdf
Elements of a European Union Strategy 1: Topical areas Objectives in critical sectors of social development (1) • Social demand perspective: • Employment – EU2020: „75% of the workforce“ – • - Immediate issue: YOUTH unemployment! • → support programmes country by country ► EU Budget, structural funds ? • Education – EU2020: „Reducing school drop-out rates below 10% and enabling 40% of age cohorts to complete third level education“ – • - Inter-generational learning, flexible schooling, training and re-training • Social Services – EU2020: „Reducing the number of people in or at risk of Poverty and Social Exclusion by 20 million“– • - MDG (Millennium Development Goals) • - Social innovation programmes for social service providers, national and European levels: Analysis, objectives, measures, implementation, assessment
Elements of a European Union Strategy 2: Topical areas Objectives in critical sectors of social development (2) • Societal challenges perspective: • Ageing – • - Co-ordination of policies (social, economic and education policies) for all generations • - Reform of pension systems: consider birth rights, prevention and participation instead of insurances • Migration – integration – diversity: • - Balancing within the European Union, inclusion policies combined with • focused re-structuring of 3rd-country support measures • Climate change – • - Focal points in ERDF, ESF, Cohesion Fund, DG ENV, DG REGIO ... • - Key issues are awareness, analysis, adaptation
Elements of a European Union Strategy 3: Topical areas (3) • Systemic change perspective – new priorities, innovation culture, and changing frames of reference: • Financialisation – (‚the problem behind the problems‘, F.-J. Radermacher): • - „Financialization“ is a „pattern of accumulation in which profit making occurs • increasingly through financial channels rather than through trade and commodity • production“ (Krippner, Greta, 2004: ‘What is Financialization?’; mimeo, UCLA Dpmt. of Sociology, p. 14.) • - It leads to depletion of productive economic resources due to financialisation • ►Perhaps the most needed social innovation of the 21st century: • ‚Management of abundance‘ Stop & reverse financialisation for SMART GROWTH • ► Consider forms of money circulation without interest and compound interest (as • applied in cases of ‚regional currencies‘ and historic examples) • Energy and resources – „20% less greenhouse gas emissions, 20% increase in energy efficiency, 20% of energy from renewable resources“ – • - Energy for all, distributed/shared innovations, prevention of lock-in situations: cf.„The Hartwell Paper“, 2010: www2.lse.ac.uk/researchAndExpertise/units/mackinder/theHartwellPaper/Home.aspx • Democracy / solidarity – what future to the EU: Federal state, trans-national entity, relapse into rising nationalism and dissolution? Institutions and inclusion of citizens
Elements of a European Union Strategy 4: Research (1) Innovating innovation by research – 100 years after Schumpeter * Vienna, Sept. 19-21, 2011 www.socialinnovation2011.eu • What is required from social science to meet the high expectations in social innovation? • Elaboration on the particular features of the concept and definition • Embedding the concept of social innovation in a comprehensive theory of innovation • Development of coherent methodologies to identify and measure social innovations • Prioritised research topics (14 selected out of 56 by conference participants) → next slide
Elements of a European Union Strategy 5: Research (2) Key issues in science and research on social innovation Topical research areas according to the Vienna Declaration LLL & socially active ageing Inclusion & integration Partic. combat of poverty Educ. impact on quality of life The potential of SI Public sector Civil Society Social media & communication Competencies of SSH Business, firms, soc. entr. Measuring, indicators Innovation in services Value creation ec/env/soc Workplace innovation Processes of co-operation
Elements of a European Union Strategy 6: Support Instruments with potentially major impact: • Research and education:EU2020 on RTDI: 3% of GDP, Horizon2020, Structural Funds ... plus: • Establish the „European School of Social Innovation“ to boost research, education and training • Initial elements in place: • European School of Social Innovation (ESSI) – AT, DE, ES • Course of study „M.A. in Social Innovation“ • Danube University Krems (AT), in collaboration with ZSI • www.donau-uni.ac.at/masi • Promotion and awareness raising: • Continuation of www.socialinnovationeurope.eu • Roadshow through Member States • Network of „European Social Innovation Cities“ (initial core: Tilburg, Bilbao, Dortmund, Vienna) • Awards and Prize competitions for social innovations (examples www.sozialmarie.org [rewarding] and European Social Innovation Competition [initiating],http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/policies/innovation/policy/social-innovation/competition/index_en.htm) • Direct funding and earmarked financial support to social innovation projects: • Incubators for social innovation and start-up social enterprises • Development of programmes to initiate and manage socially innovative regions • Support learning from each other across Europe (evaluation and assessment of cases ...) NEW – starting 2012 -2013 »The first academic education of social innovators«
Thank you for your attention Prof. Dr. Josef Hochgerner Centre for Social Innovation Linke Wienzeile 246 A - 1150 Vienna Tel. ++43.1.4950442 Fax. ++43.1.4950442-40 email: hochgerner@zsi.at http://www.zsi.at