Read more
Adopting a multidisciplinary approach, this book discusses the potential of social innovation in the pursuit of social justice in Africa. In the twenty-first century, social innovation and entrepreneurship have attracted renewed attention as a way of promoting social justice and addressing challenges of poverty and inequality.
Drawing on perspectives from human rights, economics, business, development studies and anthropology, this book illustrates the entangled relationship between societal areas and activities, as well as different actors (individuals, communities, business actors, non-governmental organisations and public authorities) in social innovation. It identifies various models of social innovation, ranging from grassroots initiatives to public policymaking, and discusses their impact on socioeconomic welfare. It analyses a broad range of original research data and incorporates localised understandings of social innovation, highlighting both the empowering potential of social innovation and the possibility that it could sustain or create inequalities. As such, this book deepens an understanding of what makes social innovation 'social' and 'just'.
Arguing that social justice innovation can only be understood in context, this book will be of interest for researchers and policy makers across the fields of human rights, economics, business, development studies, anthropology and African studies.
List of contents
Preface Introduction: Understanding Social Innovation in Africa
Part I: Conceptualizing Social Justice Innovation Social Justice Innovation. A Cross-Disciplinary and Multilayered Agenda Contextualizing and Conceptualizing the Social Enterprise - The Cooperative as an Enabler of Social Justice in Sub-Saharan Africa
Part II: Social Entrepreneurship From Coffins to Coins: Ethiopian '
iddir' Navigating the Frontier of Social Enterprise "Baron/Baroness" Food-Get-Together Celebrations and Mukando Village Contributions as Tools for Entrepreneurial Socialization and Innovation in Chikonye, Maheya and Murairwa Villages in Rural Zimbabwe Self-Organized Waste Pickers: Marginalized Yet Vital to the African City of Bamako Surviving on the Margins of Legality: Familial Ties, the Informal Economy and Re-Imagining Social Protection in Kenya
Part III: Social Technologies Livelihood Outcomes of Social Innovations for Mobile Agricultural Extension Service Delivery in South-Central Uganda Enhancing Social Justice? Experimenting with Social Media in Preservice Teacher Education at Makerere University in Uganda
Part IV: Societal Practices The Constitutional Court of South Africa as an Agent of Social Justice Community Perceptions of Social Justice in Benefit Distribution Mechanisms of Forestry Carbon Projects in Uganda Leveraging and Regulating Pension Funds for Socially Responsive Investments in the Namibian Economy Law, Clinics and Social Innovation in Africa: Addressing Justice Gaps
About the author
Viljam Engström is Head of research in Public International Law at Åbo Akademi University School of Law, Finland. His main research interests are international institutions, social protection and the function of law and legal concepts.
Maija Mustaniemi-Laakso is Postdoctoral Researcher at Åbo Akademi University School of Law/Institute for Human Rights, Finland, with research interest in issues related to vulnerability, accountability and international human rights law.
Laura Stark is Professor of Ethnology at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. Her research interests include gender, sexuality, and urban poverty in Africa and she has led five externally funded, multi-researcher projects.