Mapping European and forest related policies supporting social innovation for rural settings
Authors/Creators
- 1. University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna BOKU
- 2. University of Oulu, Cultural Anthropology, Finland
- 3. Social, Economic and Geographical Sciences Group, The James Hutton Institute, Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen AB15 8 QH, UK
Description
The term “social innovation” (SI) is currently applied to denote a broad range of activities connected to explicit
goals and supposedly designed to address inherent societal problems. These problems are rooted in current
economic and ecological crises, such as poverty, unemployment, forced migration, brain drain, social inequality
or environmental destruction. This article focuses on the EU and national policies that have the potential to
support Social Innovation in rural areas and maps possible future policy efforts in this regard. However, many of
the policies that we find to have potential for possible effective social innovation support do not have much in
common concerning their targets. In consequence, the article outlines a threefold typology for categorizing the
different policy targets that have impacts on social innovation in rural areas: (i) policies targeting vulnerable
social groups, (ii) policies targeting societal challenges at large and (iii) policies targeting the participatory
inclusion of civil society. In addition we outline enabling and hindering policy factors for social innovation and
we apply the threefold typology to the example of forest policy. The conceptual framework in combination with
the forest policy objectives we identify provides a useful basis for further research in this area.
Notes
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Related works
- Is derived from
- 10.1016/j.forpol.2018.09.015 (DOI)