Review article
https://doi.org/10.3935/rsp.v23i1.1279
Social Innovations as a Contribution to Strengthening Social Cohesion and Mitigating Social Crisis in European Urban Social Programs
Gojko Bežovan
orcid.org/0000-0002-7543-6875
; Studijski centar socijalnog rada, Pravni fakultet Sveučilišta u Zagrebu
Jelena Matančević
orcid.org/0000-0003-2807-133X
; Studijski centar socijalnog rada, Pravni fakultet Zagreb
Danijel Baturina
orcid.org/0000-0002-9063-305X
; Studijski centar socijalnog rada, Pravni fakultet Zagreb
Abstract
This paper discusses a potential contribution of social innovations to strengthening social cohesion and mitigating the effects of the crisis. In EU funding policies and programs, social innovations are recognized as an important contribution to strengthening of social cohesion, which has weakened due to the crisis and increasing social vulnerability. At the same time, it is shown that social innovations in the Croatian context are still a concept poorly understood by policy creators, experts, and the general public. The findings and conclusions of the paper are based on the empirical research conducted within the international FP7 project WILCO - Welfare Innovations at Local Levels in Favour of Cohesion, which studied the selected towns (in Croatia Zagreb and Varaždin) and characteristics of their social systems, and which analyzed identified examples of social innovations. Local social systems of cities included in the research reflected the characteristics of national welfare regimes only partially, and the openness and support of local authorities is crucial for the development and sustainability of social innovations. Most of the studied innovations were in the field of services, although innovations were also recognized in innovative instruments of regulation and social rights, the new forms of governance and new modes of work and funding of organizations, and they can have an impact on the gradual changes of the local social systems. In the Croatian context, three types of social innovations can be distinguished: (1) innovations occurring in the public sector, with the support of experts from outside the industry, (2) innovations that come from abroad, as a result of foreign financial programs, and (3) innovations coming from civil society, based on the self-organization of citizens. While in the examples of some Western European cities the public sector with its professional capacity is recognized as an important producer of social innovations, in Croatia, past experiences and the research conducted within the project suggest that most social innovations come from civil society, where the level of cultural and social capital is an important prerequisite for the development and success of innovations.
Keywords
social innovations; social cohesion; social services; government; local social systems; Europe; Croatia
Hrčak ID:
155455
URI
Publication date:
28.3.2016.
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