The potential of Social Innovation in Marginalised Rural Areas: an overview of the SIMRA project NIJNIK Maria, BARLAGNE Carla, MILLER David and HEWITT Richard The James Hutton Institute www.simra-h2020.eu/
This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No 677622
CECHR Annual Symposium, West Park Conference Centre, Dundee 22nd February 2017
The potential of Social Innovation in Marginalised Rural Areas: an overview of the SIMRA project NIJNIK Maria, BARLAGNE Carla, MILLER David and HEWITT Richard The James Hutton Institute
Social Innovation (SI): …responds to social demands not traditionally addressed by markets or existing institutions…. …is first and foremost about quality of life and well-being… …involves new social relationships and collaborations, governance mechanisms & economic opportunities…
Geographic area of remit
…a mechanism for human societies to address sustainability and social justice issues… This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No 677622
CECHR Annual Symposium, West Park Conference Centre, Dundee 22nd February 2017
Social Innovation as one answer to the recent crisis Crisis requires us to “shift to a new economic thinking” and “innovative models of growth and governance … recreate trust among people … [and] economic and social sustainability and transparency in decision making” (BEPA, Challenge Social Innovation, 2012). SI does not “just happen” but requires incentives and mechanisms to stimulate it. There is a need to identify what can leverage it (OECD, 2012) Our project: Social Innovation in Marginalised Rural Areas (SIMRA). EU H2020. 6m €, April 2016 to March 2020 14 countries, including 2 EEA members, and partners from Middle East and North Africa. Coordinated by James Hutton Institute.
This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No 677622
CECHR Annual Symposium, West Park Conference Centre, Dundee 22nd February 2017
Project Overview Overarching aim: •
Advance understanding of social innovation and innovative governance in agriculture, forestry and rural development, and how to boost them, in marginalised rural areas across Europe and the Mediterranean, including non-EU countries
Case studies and Innovation Actions to: •
Support governance and SIs, addressing social needs/new social relationships and collaborations
Key tasks: i) Develop theoretical and operational frameworks ii) Develop methods for evaluation of SI and impacts in rural areas iii) Co-construct evaluation of SIs iv) Synthesise and disseminate to policy makers/end-users v) Create collaborative learning, networking and innovation actions This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No 677622
CECHR Annual Symposium, West Park Conference Centre, Dundee 22nd February 2017
Communication Dissemination through social media, web etc. Wide range of social media 16 languages Dedicated communication team
Social Innovation Think Tank Context, horizon-scanning, direction Science Advisory Board Stakeholder Involvement Board 22 SITT members – 10 x EU countries; Ukraine, Turkey, Egypt, Tunisia This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under Grant Agreement No 677622
CECHR Annual Symposium, West Park Conference Centre, Dundee 22nd February 2017