Written by leading experts from across Europe, this book provides a grounded exploration of innovation in the practice, research and education of social work. It focuses on the role of participation, collaboration and co-creation as key drivers of social innovation within these fields, providing practical examples of social entrepreneurship, people-centred design and participatory led innovation.
The positive outcomes of local social innovations are analysed in the wider European framework, with reflections and recommendations for advancing innovation in policy, service provision, education and research.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Introduction – Jean Pierre Wilken, Anne Parpan- Blaser, Sarah Prosser, Suzan van der Pas and Erik Jansen
Part 1: Framing Social Innovation and Social Work
1. Social Work and Social Innovation: How the Twain Can Meet – Jean Pierre Wilken and Anne Parpan-Blaser
2. How to Change Our Neighbourhoods, Regions and the World: Using Symptoms, Systems and Transformation as a Framework for Social Innovation and Social Work – Sarah Prosser and Ole Pedersen
3. Social Work, Social Innovation, Discretion and Creativity: Day-to-Day Innovation of Practice – Tony Evans
4. Potential for Social Innovation in Social Work: Applying the Capability Approach – Annica Brummel, Erik Jansen, Mara A. Yerkes and Jana Javornik
Part 2: Examples of Social Innovations in Social Work across Europe
Theme A: Co-creation and Co-production of Social Services: Social Innovation in Practice
5. The Art of Co-creation: Service Innovation in Europe – Chris Fox and Susan Baines
6. Promoting Social Service Innovation: Regional and Local Examples from across Europe – Alfonso Lara-Montero
7. Co-creation in Action: Lessons from the Co SIE Project – Sandra Geelhoed and Eva Heijmans
8. Social Innovation and Service Users’ Involvement: Enhancing the Knowledge of Social Work – Kristel Driessens, Sidsel Natland and Vicky Lyssens-Danneboom
9. Moderating the Process of Social Innovation: Insights from a Case Study on Labour Market Activation – Koen Dortmans, Erik Jansen and Lineke Van Hal
Theme B: Education and Learning: Social Innovation in Social Work Education and Learning
10. Regional Learning Networks in the Social Welfare Domain: Drivers of Social Innovation in Social Work – Suzan Van Der Pas and Erik Jansen
11. Putting Learning Communities into Practice: Innovation of Social Work Education – Meike Koop, Ankie Schoenmakers, Ina Tilma, Nathalie Grahame and Henk Spies
12. Learning from Innovation Processes: Introducing Easy Language in Adult Protection Services – Anne Parpan-Blaser
Theme C: Community Work, Community-Led Innovation and Collective Action
13. The Rediscovery of Community: Community Development as Social Innovation – Jean Pierre Wilken and Dagmar Narusson
14. Climate Change from a Green Social Work Perspective: Responding to a Constantly Evolving Crisis Challenging Social Work Practice – Lena Dominelli
15. Co-creation of Nature-Based Solutions: Guidelines for Citizen Engagement – Nathalie Nunes, Knud Erik Hilding-Hamann and Isabel Ferreira
16. Innovating Social Work Practices to Better Address Homelessness: Participatory Action Research with Community Services in Italy – Marta Gaboardi, Sabina Licursi and Emanuela Pascuzzi
17. Challenging the Power Status Quo: Paradoxes in Grass Roots Social Innovation – Luc De Droogh and Jeroen Gradener
Theme D: Social Entrepreneurship: Inclusive and Regenerative Models of Social Business and Innovation for Sustainable Impact
18. Social Entrepreneurship as Social Innovation: What about Social Work? – Leendert de Bell, Zsolt Bugarszki and Geof Cox
19. The Growing Rhetoric of Entrepreneurship in Times of Crisis: Future Challenges of Social Work in the Case of Portugal – Antonela Jesus and Maria Inês Amaro
20. Unlimited Incubators for Belonging, Cohesion and Impact: Nurturing ‘What Is Already There’ – Sarah Prosser, Ole Pedersen and Rosa Engebrigtsen Bye
21. Developing the Innovative Power of Social Work: Synthesis and Future Directions – Erik Jansen, Anne Parpan-Blaser, Suzan Van Der Pas, Sarah Prosser and Jean Pierre Wilken
Sobre o autor
Mara Yerkes is Associate Professor of Interdisciplinary Social Science at Utrecht University.