1st Edition

Exploring Civic Innovation for Social and Economic Transformation

Edited By Kees Biekart, Wendy Harcourt, Peter Knorringa Copyright 2016
    292 Pages
    by Routledge

    292 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This edited collection examines the globally rising phenomenon of civic innovation. Combining nuanced theory with rich empirical examples, this book defines the dynamic and complex process of civic innovation as the multiple economic, political and social processes where peoples, organizations, movements and ideas are shaping struggles for global justice on the interface of capitalism.



    Exploring Civic Innovation for Social and Economic Transformation reflects the increasingly holistic approach to development in terms of both teaching and research, and illustrates how civic innovation happens everywhere; at the global and institutional level as well as in communities and for individuals. Through conceptual debate and narrative accounts, this book explores the new practices emerging from varying economies, transformative empowerment strategies in global value chains, local politics of social movements and the struggles for rights in regards to race, gender and sexuality.



    Bringing together scholars from a range of disciplines, this book would be of interest to post-graduate students of development studies, with an interest in social research.

    Table of Contents







    Chapter 1 Introduction: Giving meaning to Civic Innovation



    Kees Biekart, Wendy Harcourt and Peter Knorringa





    Chapter 2 The Institutional Foundations of Civic Innovation



    Georgina Gomez and Holly Ritchie 





    Chapter 3 Change actors and civic innovators: who triggers change? Systematizing the role of interlocutors in civic innovation processes



    Alan Fowler





    Chapter 4 Can Consultants be Civic Innovators? Exploring their Roles as Auditors and Allies



    Sylvia I. Bergh and Kees Biekart





    Chapter 5 Between State, Market and Civil Society: What constitutes the social in social entrepreneurship?



    A.H.J. (Bert) Helmsing





    Chapter 6 Civic Innovation in Value Chains: Towards Workers as Agents in Non-governmental Labour Regulation



    Karin Astrid Siegmann, Jeroen Merk and Peter Knorringa 





    Chapter 7 Civic Innovation by Family Farmers in the Face of Global Value Chain Inclusion: Between Material Conditions and Imagined Futures



    Lee Pegler and Wanessa Marques Silva



    Chapter 8 Exploring embodiment and intersectionality in transnational feminist activist research



    Wendy Harcourt, Rosalba Icaza and Virginia Vargas





    Chapter 9 Towards new perspectives on labour precarity and decent work of sex workers



    Silke Heumann, Karin Astrid Siegmann and Empower Foundation





    Chapter 10 Resistance and Hope: youth responding to the economic crisis in Southern Europe



    Paulina (Sat) Trejo-Mendez, Paula Sánchez de la Blanca, Laura Santamaría Buitrago, Emma Claire Sardoni and Guilia Simula with Wendy Harcourt





    Chapter 11 Civic Activism and Social Accountability: a Quantitative Approach



    Anderson Macedo de Jesus and Irene van Staveren 





    Biography

    Kees Biekart is Associate Professor of Political Sociology at the International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University in Rotterdam, The Netherlands.



    Wendy Harcourt is Associate Professor in Critical Development and Feminist Studies at the International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University in Rotterdam, The Netherlands.



    Peter Knorringa is Professor of Private Sector and Development at the International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University in Rotterdam, The Netherlands.