Guest Editors
Michael Bull, Manchester Metropolitan University
Tim Curtis, University of Northampton
Vicky Nowak, Manchester Metropolitan University
Presentation
This Thematic Issue seeks to explore critical perspectives of an international nature on social innovation (SI), social enterprise (SE) and/or social solidarity economy (SSE). The aim is to examine the grand narrative, explore the ontological assumptions of the field, challenge the normative and present alternatives that draw attention to political economy, critical theory and critical management studies.
Critical perspectives emerged in social innovation (SI) literature as a concerted effort sometime in 2008. A few voices sounded from the edges of the field much earlier. Ash Amin, Professor of Geography at Durham University, inspected the new favourite of public policy way back in 2002, discarded it as a “a poor substitute for a welfare state” and never returned to the subject. There were heated debates that challenged the grand narrative of SI at the International Social Innovation Research Conferences (ISIRC) (once called the Social Enterprise Research Conference before becoming ISIRC with the involvement of the social innovation theme from Skoll Centre). The Voluntary Sector Studies Network (VSSN) conferences picked away at the promise of unlimited performance and achievement of the upstart SE in a mature voluntary and charity network (Aiken, 2002, 2006, 2007; Grenier, 2009; Pharaoh, Scott & Fisher, 2004). Still, on the whole, the literature in the last twenty years has been overwhelmingly interested in promoting social enterprise (SE) and SI as (a) an inherently good thing, (b) a solution to all problems and (c) a politically neutral complement to neo-liberal economics globally.
Full Issue
View or download the full issue | Full Issue |
Table of Contents
Editorial
Michael Bull, Timothy Curtis, Vicky Nowak
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1-7
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Articles
Timothy Curtis, Michael Bull, Vicky Nowak
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8-34
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Paradoxes of Transformative Social Innovation: From Critical Awareness towards Strategies of Inquiry
Bonno Pel, Julia M. Wittmayer, Flor Avelino, Tom Bauler
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35-62
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Everything and nothing: A critical review of the “social” in Innovation and Entrepreneurship studies
Stefania Sardo, Beniamino Callegari, Bisrat A. Misganaw
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63-88
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Timothy Curtis
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89-117
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Hande Sinem Ergun, Seray Begüm Samur-Teraman
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118-142
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