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https://doi.org/10.5380/nocsi.v0i4.91115

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Beyond bricolage: social innovation as systematic, consistent and repeatable process

[journal article]

Curtis, Timothy

Abstract

This paper provides empirical research demonstrating that there are clear, consistent and repeatable processes at play in social innovation, calling into question the currently hegemonic postmodernist concept of 'social bricolage' in social innovation literature. The paper applies a critical realist... view more

This paper provides empirical research demonstrating that there are clear, consistent and repeatable processes at play in social innovation, calling into question the currently hegemonic postmodernist concept of 'social bricolage' in social innovation literature. The paper applies a critical realist & systems analysis approach, utilising Checkland's (1981/2000) Soft Systems Methodology (SSM). The research project investigated 8 neighbourhood and community policing projects using a handbook called Locally identified Solutions & Practices (LISP). LISP was implemented in a range of different social contexts to construct context-mechanism-outcome (CMO) chains (after Pawson, 2013) in a two-step process to identify which social innovation mechanisms contributed to what outcomes in which contexts. The paper reports on empirically based evidence of social innovation processes that do not rely on the characteristics of the individual social entrepreneur or the serendipity of social bricolage 'freeplay' (Derrida, 1970). The paper makes the case that social innovation is more than 'bricolage' (Derrida, 1970; Di Domenico et al., 2010), not an eclectic mysterious craft of innovation that relies on the skills and characteristics of the social entrepreneur, but instead a systematic, consistent and repeatable process.... view less

Keywords
innovation; social change; process

Classification
Sociology of Science, Sociology of Technology, Research on Science and Technology

Free Keywords
bricolage; soft systems; community policing; social innovation

Document language
English

Publication Year
2022

Page/Pages
p. 89-117

Journal
NOvation - Critical Studies of Innovation (2022) 4

Issue topic
Critical perspectives in social innovation, social enterprise and/or the social solidarity economy

ISSN
2562-7147

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.