Bild

1.4 Is Industrial and Territorial Ecology a Type of Social Innovation That is Able to Foster Territorial Development?

    Stéphane Ogé, Alexandre Bredimas

Social Innovation in urban and regional development, pp. 47-58, 2018/06/18

Perspectives on an emerging field in planning and urban studies

doi: 10.1553/ISR_FB047s47

doi: 10.1553/ISR_FB047s47

€  15,– 

incl. VAT

   

incl. VAT

PDF
X
BibTEX-Export:

X
EndNote/Zotero-Export:

X
RIS-Export:

X 
Researchgate-Export (COinS)

Permanent QR-Code

doi:10.1553/ISR_FB047s47



doi:10.1553/ISR_FB047s47

People are not even aware that they are doing something socially innovative. This statement is a recurring theme when dealing with social innovation (SI) in the academic and policymaking context. Although there is a significant body of literature on social innovation and interdisciplinary research programmes have gained a visible impact1 over time, there seems to be a gap between debating and doing social innovation. Catchwords such as scalability, institutionalization, the third sector and bottom-up practices illustrate the range of interest in SI, while self-organized citizens and grass-roots organisations apply counteracting mechanisms in their daily practices.