Understanding social innovation processes in rural areas: empirical evidence from social enterprises in Germany
ISSN: 1750-8614
Article publication date: 18 September 2020
Issue publication date: 4 August 2021
Abstract
Purpose
Against the background of increasing infrastructure loss in many rural areas, this study aims to contribute conceptually and empirically towards better understanding of rural innovation processes related to provision of public goods.
Design/methodology/approach
The nationally focused understanding of innovation processes leads the debate on rural development into a dilemma that this study seeks to sidestep via the concept of social innovation. Community cooperatives – a type of social enterprise that has increasingly emerged in rural areas of Germany in the past decade – offer the opportunity to examine social innovation processes. This cross-case study reveals the broad range of activities in which such cooperatives are active and analyses their social innovation processes.
Findings
The study shows that the social innovation governance framework enables examination of social innovation processes. Although macro-level policy has appeared to be an important instrument for financing social innovation, public actors at the micro-level seem barely able to initiate social innovation processes unless they are also private actors and, therefore, can pursue additional incentives. The social innovations studied here seem to differ in terms of their actor constellations and resource-allocation patterns, depending on whether they are concerned with the establishment or maintenance of local infrastructure. What they have in common, however, is the initiation of formalised collective-action processes that serve to legitimise social innovation.
Originality/value
By applying an analytical framework that is new to the literature on social innovation, the study provides insight into the activities and decision-making processes of actors involved in social innovation in rural areas. In this context, community cooperatives have rarely been studied as an interface between public, private and civil society actors or as a platform for mobilising human, social and financial capital.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge the financial support of the Federal Ministry of Education and Research of Germany within the framework of Broadening Horizons, Changing Perspectives (funding code 01IO1707).
Citation
Martens, K., Wolff, A. and Hanisch, M. (2021), "Understanding social innovation processes in rural areas: empirical evidence from social enterprises in Germany", Social Enterprise Journal, Vol. 17 No. 2, pp. 220-239. https://doi.org/10.1108/SEJ-12-2019-0093
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited