Research meets practice

Research meets practice: how can social innovation transform the society we live in?

Research meets practice, during the TRANSIT final conference on transformative social innovation!The event called “Learning for Change: A Journey through the Theory & Practice of Transformative Social Innovation” takes place on the 14 and 15th of September, in BlueCity 010, Rotterdam. It marks the end of a four-year international research project on transformative social innovation (TRANSIT). The project involved 12 research institutes from Europe and Latin-America and was coordinated by DRIFT, a leading institute for sustainability transitions. A team of international researchers joined efforts to study how social innovations can have a transformative impact on society.
Social innovation
Social innovation is seen more and more as an effective way of dealing with challenges in our society and thus, it found its way into policy discourses across the EU. In the aftermath of the recent economic recession and the wider reconfigurations of the welfare state, the attention for social innovation has increased as a way to empower people and drive societal change. However, the optimistic assumptions about social innovation merit scrutiny, as they seem to underestimate the complexity of these challenges.
This conference shines a light on the emerging initiatives and networks in transformative social innovation: communities, citizens, pioneers, social entrepreneurs and policy-makers across the world, who are making change on the ground. These initiatives are currently largely below the radar of policy and media at the national and global level but offer a very inspiring and powerful alternative to the present situation.
Transformative change towards resilient and sustainable societies
Twenty transnational networks working on social innovation will be represented at the event. This includes, amongst others, the Basic Income Earth Network that is committed to a worldwide basic income. Also present are pioneers in the field of participatory budgeting, which started in Porto Alegre, Brazil, and is now spreading worldwide, and Slow Food, a grassroots organization with over 100.000 members that working for a new system of food production and consumption.
Read more at: https://www.essrg.hu/en/transit-final/