NEWS
June 4, 2021
IN BRIEF
By SSIR Editors The 2021 Frontiers of Social Innovation Conference: “People, Power, Resources: Enacting an Equitable Future” featured senior leaders of nonprofit organizations, philanthropy, academia, business, and government addressing how the social innovation community can respond to a world struggling with a global pandemic, continued racial injustices, and assaults on democracy. SSIR‘s editors recapped the virtual conference and assembled a list of articles related to the sessions. Session 1: Systems Work Is Not a Thought Experiment, It’s a Continual Practice Francois Bonnici of the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship, Cynthia Rayner of the Bertha Centre for Social Innovation at the University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business, René Parker of RLabs, […]
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By SSIR Editors
The 2021 Frontiers of Social Innovation Conference: “People, Power, Resources: Enacting an Equitable Future” featured senior leaders of nonprofit organizations, philanthropy, academia, business, and government addressing how the social innovation community can respond to a world struggling with a global pandemic, continued racial injustices, and assaults on democracy. SSIR‘s editors recapped the virtual conference and assembled a list of articles related to the sessions.
Session 1: Systems Work Is Not a Thought Experiment, It’s a Continual Practice
Francois Bonnici of the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship, Cynthia Rayner of the Bertha Centre for Social Innovation at the University of Cape Town Graduate School of Business, René Parker of RLabs, Clarita Arboleda of Fundacion Escuela Nueva, and Arbind Singh discussed the concept of “systems work” and its emphasis on the “how to” of systems change.
"The only way to change the world is to change one person's world." —@ReneParker (@RLabs) speaking about systems work at #SSIRFrontiers. pic.twitter.com/Sz7nUe7CUp
— Social Innovation (@SSIReview) May 11, 2021
Go Deeper:
Session 2: Could This Be the Future of Our Economic System? A Discussion on ‘Mutualism’
Sara Horowitz, founder of the Freelancers Union, former labor lawyer, and former chair of the board of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and Eric Nee, editor-in-chief of SSIR, discussed an intergenerational approach to developing the cooperative, mutually beneficial economic mechanisms within our societies.
“Mutualism: an alternative model of how society can best be organized to meet people’s needs.” A conversation between @Sara_Horowitz (@freelancersu) and @SSIReview EIC Eric Nee (@ericnee) at #SSIRFrontiers pic.twitter.com/tUsFw7p23R
— Social Innovation (@SSIReview) May 11, 2021
Go Deeper:
- Democratizing Economic Power to Break the Cycle of American Inequality
- The Entrepreneurial Union
- Private Equity, Public Good
Session 3: Rapid Talks: Driving Policy Change and the Need for Government Transparency
Heather Hurlburt of New Models of Policy Change at New America and Blair Glencorse of Accountability Lab discussed broken norms, policy change, and the need for greater government transparency.
I'm talking now as part of @SSIReview #SSIRFrontiers about how #translocal networks are the solution to many of our global problems w/reference to @opengovpart @CIVICUSalliance @IntegrityIcon and more! https://t.co/KzOXKtU7gq
— Blair Glencorse (@blairglencorse) May 11, 2021
What are #translocal networks, I hear you asking! Well- I laid it all out as part of the @SSIReview #SSIRfrontiers conference recently- they are #grassroots, learning-focused, #organic, #values-based and #partner oriented. @AccountLab is one. More here: https://t.co/lwH9OJDnxX
— Blair Glencorse (@blairglencorse) May 12, 2021
To address the many forms of inequity "systems change is now imperative" says @blairglencorse (@AccountLab) at #SSIRFrontiers. "At the heart of these problems is governance, the way in which we should manage people, power & resources." More on @AccountLab: https://t.co/Hw8IvPHE1x
— Social Innovation (@SSIReview) May 11, 2021
Go Deeper:
- Rebuilding Trust in American Institutions
- Equity, Power-Sharing, and Renewal of Civil Society
- SSIR Guide to Influencing Public Policy
Article originally published in Standford Social Innovation Review