Social Innovation: Insights from Institutional Theory

MSM's Assistant Professor of Sustainable Business, Ms. Jakomijn van Wijk, is currently working as a guest editor of a special issue of Business & Society, one of the leading journals at the intersection of business and issues of social responsibility, ethics and governance. The special issue has a focus on "Social Innovation: Insights from Institutional Theory" which reflects very well on Jakomijn's research interest: processes of institutional change towards sustainability, partnership networks in global value chains and entrepreneurship for inclusive development.

Call for Papers:  Special Issue of Business & Society
Social Innovation: Insights from Institutional Theory

Guest editors:  
Jakomijn van Wijk, Maastricht School of Management
Silvia Dorado, University of Rhode Island
Ignasi Marti, EMLYON Business School, OCE Research Center
Charlene Zietsma, Schulich School of Business, York

Social innovation refers to the process of developing and implementing novel solutions to social problems, often involving re-negotiations of settled institutions among diverse actors with conflicting logics. As such, social innovation entails institutional change.  Social innovations are urgently needed as we confront “wicked problems” (Rittel and Weber, 1973), such as climate change, poverty alleviation, income inequality and persistent societal conflicts. Such problems feature substantial interdependencies among multiple systems and actors, and have redistributive implications for entrenched interests (Rayner, 2006).

Societal problems provide both threats and opportunities for business and entrepreneurs (e.g. Howard-Grenville, Buckle, Hoskins & George, 2014), and in turn businesses themselves can have both positive and negative effects on social and environmental outcomes (Okereke,  Wittneben  &  Bowen,  2012; Porter & Kramer, 2006; Schrempf, 2014). Businesses, through operational  externalities and efforts to increase profits, both cause societal harms and sometimes contribute  significantly  to  the maintenance  or  even  worsening  of  arrangements which  perpetuate those harms, often through subtle or overt exercise of market or political power (Barley, 2007; Levy & Kaplan, 2008). Yet businesses can also ameliorate societal harms by changing practices or contributing to solutions through corporate social responsibility, opportunity-driven innovation and philanthropy (Egri & Ralston, 2008; Matten & Crane, 2005; O’Toole & Vogel, 2011; Reficco & Marquez, 2012; Spar & La Mure, 2003). In addition, market logics are being embraced to advance social welfare goals in arenas such as healthcare, education and poverty alleviation (see,  e.g., Mair,  Marti  &  Ventresca,  2012; Reay  &  Hinings,  2005;  2009),  with  the  expectation  that hybrid organizational  models  that  balance  social  and economic  logics (Battilana  &  Dorado,  2010;  Battilana  &  Lee, 2014), will enable social innovators to meet societal needs effectively.

Institutional research has played a significant role in the study of efforts to alleviate social problems (Battilana & Dorado, 2010; Dorado, 2013; Hallett, 2010; Lawrence, Hardy, & Phillips, 2002; Maguire, Hardy, & Lawrence, 2004; Zietsma & Lawrence, 2010) and is well positioned to contribute to an improved understanding of social innovation. Other research fields (stakeholder management, corporate social responsibility, and cross‐sector partnerships, for example), have  advanced  management  knowledge  on  the  interface  between  business  and  society (De  Bakker, Groenewegen  &  Den  Hond,  2005) .  Yet, studies  in  these  fields frequently  take the  perspective of businesses attempting to gain benefits or reduce risk by acting on societal problems (Vock, van Dolen & Kolk, 2014; Griffin & Prakash, 2014), without focusing on the views of other actors. Shallow “benign” business interventions deflect attention,  often  maintain  existing  power  structures and they may even  reinforce  ‘darker’  aspects  of wicked problems (Foucault, 1995; Khan, Munir & Willmott, 2007).

Institutional  theory instead starts  at  a  macro‐level,  assessing  the  positions and  interdependent  actions of the multiple  constituents  of  issue ‐focused  fields  (Wooten  &  Hoffman,  2008;  Zietsma & Lawrence, 2010), and considering seriously the idea that rules,  norms and beliefs  are  socially  constituted, negotiated  orders  (Marti, Courpasson & Barbosa, 2013; Strauss, 1978), which can be renegotiated in socially innovative ways (e.g. Van Wijk, Stam, Elfring, Zietsma & den Hond, 2013). The study of institutional work emphasizes the creation, disruption and maintenance of the institutionalized social structures that govern behavior (Lawrence & Suddaby, 2006), and thus speaks to how entrenched practices and ideas get held in place, and how they may be replaced with more socially beneficial arrangements.  Furthermore, the burgeoning institutional complexity perspective, with its focus on how actors respond to multiple, sometimes competing logics (Greenwood, Raynard, Kodeih, Micelotta & Lounsbury, 2011), applies well to the context of wicked societal problems.

Taking  an  institutional  perspective  on social  innovation  suggests several  topics  and a  range  of interesting questions.  We list below some that are in line with our theme.

Negotiations among diverse actors in social innovation:
• How do negotiation spaces for institutional change such as “relational spaces” (Kellogg, 2009) and “field-configuring events” (Lampel & Meyer, 2008) emerge and affect social innovation? How is experimentation facilitated in such spaces (van Wijk, van der Duim, Lamers & Sumba, 2014)?
• What characteristics and processes affect negotiation spaces for institutional change?
• What role does identity and identification play in social innovation?
• How do emotional investments in institutions affect negotiations for institutional change and engagement in social innovation?
• How are marginalized actors, who are often the ones that suffer most directly from wicked problems, silenced or given voice in negotiations (Sassen, 2014)?
• How do incumbents “fight back”? What systems, structures and processes are activated to defend entrenched interests (Bourdieu, 2005)?

The role of hybrid forms and boundary objects in social innovation:
• How do diverse  actors  surface conflicts and compatibilities among different institutional logics and negotiate hybrid arrangements or boundary objects within or across institutional fields?
• How are arrangements involving hybrid institutional logics maintained or adapted over time?
• Can such arrangements be scaled up (expanded in impact) or scaled out (diffused to other settings), and what are the factors that affect such scaling?

The influence of institutional voids in social innovation:
• What role do institutional voids (policy, market, social) play in social innovation processes?
• How do actors signal and exploit voids for social innovation (Mair & Martí, 2009)? How does their institutional work ameliorate voids?
• Do different institutional orders substitute for each other when voids exist (e.g., are market voids filled by social structures? Policy voids filled by market structures)? What are the implications of such substitution?

Other relevant questions:
• What alternative institutional arrangements are emerging in response to the social problems associated with  capitalism, such  as  the  sharing  economy,  user  networks and  community‐based  and  cooperative models? How do these arrangements emerge and evolve and how are they governed?
• What  role  do  communication  technologies  including  social  media,  collaboration  technologies  and  e‐governance technologies play in institutional change for social innovation?
• What are the impacts of or on informal institutions when regulative or coercive power is used to effect social innovation?

These topics are meant to be generative rather than exhaustive. We encourage authors to think broadly about this topic and contact a member of the editorial team if they wish to explore the fit of their research to the special issue theme. We are open to theoretical and empirical papers, using a variety of methodologies.

Submission process and schedule
• Authors should submit their full manuscripts through ScholarOne Manuscripts by September 1st, 2015 to http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/bas.
• Be sure to specify in the cover letter document that the manuscript is for the special issue on “Social Innovation: Insights from Institutional Theory”.
• Manuscripts should be prepared following the Business & Society author guidelines:  http://www.sagepub.com/journals/Journal200878/manuscriptSubmission.
• All articles will be double‐blind peer reviewed by a minimum of two anonymous referees.
• Authors of papers selected for publication will be invited for a manuscript development workshop (expected date and location: March 27‐29, 2016, EM Lyon, France) before the final submission is due.

About the journal
Business & Society is one of the leading journals at the intersection of business and issues of social responsibility, ethics and governance. It is published by SAGE and its current two‐year Citation Impact Factor is 1.936 (2012). It was ranked 31 out of 116 journals in the Business category of the 2012 Thomson Reuters Journals Citation Report (ISI). For further details see
http://bas.sagepub.com.

About the guest editors
Jakomijn van Wijk (wijk@msm.nl) is Assistant Professor at the Maastricht School of Management, the Netherlands. Her research interests include processes of institutional change towards sustainability, partnership networks in global value chains and entrepreneurship for inclusive development.  Her research has been published in Academy of Management Journal, Annals of Tourism Research and Journal of Sustainable Tourism amongst others.

Silvia Dorado (sdorado@mail.uri.edu) is Associate Professor of management at the University of Rhode Island, United States. She is also a board member of DePaul Industries; a social enterprise devoted to generate employment for individuals with disabilities. In her research, Dr. Dorado has explored topics around processes of social innovation within markets as well as the origin, management, and challenges of social enterprises. She has published on these topics in several top management journals including Academy of Management Journal, Journal of Business Venturing, Nonforprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, and Organization Studies.

Ignasi  Marti (marti@em‐lyon.com) is Associate Professor of organization theory and entrepreneurship at the EMLYON Business School, where he is the Director of the OCE Research Center. His research focuses on dignity, resistance, entrepreneurship, power and politics, and other institutional processes.  His research has been published in Academy of Management Journal, Organization Studies, Journal of Business Venturing, Entrepreneurship: Theory and Practice and other journals.

Charlene Zietsma (czietsma@schulich.yorku.ca) is Associate Professor, Ann Brown Chair of Organization Studies and Director of Entrepreneurial Studies at the Schulich School of Business, York University, in Toronto, Canada. Her research focuses on institutional and entrepreneurial processes at the intersection of business and society, frequently in the area of sustainability. Her research has been published in Administrative Science Quarterly, Academy of Management Journal, Organization Science, Organization Studies, Business & Society and elsewhere.

More information: http://www.iabs.net/Portals/0/Links/Research/Special%20Call%20-%20Social%20Innovation.pdf

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