Diving into Social Innovation: A Bibliometric Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method—Procedures and Data
3. Results
3.1. Social Innovation Evolution
3.2. Evolution Networks and Co-Citations
4. Discussion
- Market—What are the effects of market forces on the creation and development of social enterprises? In mixed markets, where nonprofit and for-profit organizations operate, what are the competitive advantages, disadvantages, and interactive dynamics? Do social enterprises assume some risks at their market early stage and development? What is the process used to identify social entrepreneurship opportunities? What affects growth, competition, and collaboration between social enterprises?
- Mission—How does an organization’s mission affect their strategy? How does the mission affect resource mobilization? How can powerful mission statements be created?
- Capital—What are the main drivers of philanthropic capital markets? How efficient are these markets? What determines their structure? How does a social entrepreneur determine the ideal mix of sources of finance? What are the effects and effectiveness of the risk analysis performed for social entrepreneurship? What new financial instruments could be created to overcome some of the current shortcomings in philanthropic capital markets?
- People—What are the motivations of social entrepreneurs and how do they compare with commercial entrepreneurs? What role do non-monetary incentives play in mobilizing people involved in social entrepreneurship? Can firms be effectively used in social enterprises, and vice versa, and to what extent can non-monetary incentive systems in social enterprises be used in firms? What are the most effective forms for a social entrepreneur to mobilize and manage volunteers?
- Performance—How can social value creation be measured? How can entrepreneurs better communicate with different stakeholders? How can performance measures be integrated into management systems?
- Context—How do contextual forces shape the creation of opportunities for social entrepreneurship? How do contextual differences in countries or communities change these forces? What are the contextual forces that stimulate social innovation and entrepreneurship?
Main Sources of Citations
5. Conclusions, Limitations and Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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References | Concepts |
---|---|
Taylor (1970) | Improved forms of action, new ways of doing things, new social inventions. |
Porter (1998) | Creation and maintenance of competitive advantages for companies, also ensuring their continuity and sustainability. |
Mumford (2002) | New ideas about how people should organize interpersonal activities, or social interactions, to meet one or more common goals. |
Cloutier (2003) | New response with a lasting effect pointed at a social situation considered unsatisfactory that seeks the well-being of individuals and/or communities. |
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) | Essential factor for the performance of companies, not only for productivity growth but also to increase the efficiency and quality of their operations, which can increase demand and profit margin. |
Novy and Leubolt (2005) | Social innovation depends on satisfying basic human needs, increasing the political participation of marginalized groups, and increasing socio-political capacity and access to resources to strengthen rights that lead to the satisfaction of basic needs and enhance participation. |
Moulaert and Nussbaumer (2005) | Innovation in social relations between individuals and groups of humans in communities. |
Young (2006) | The result of a set of responses and effects whose needs are not being met by other actors, namely by the State and the market. |
Shaw and Carter (2007) Rochester (2013) | Innovation identifies and responds to the needs of society. |
Moulaert et al. (2007) | A tool for urban development focused on meeting human needs through innovation in neighborhood relations and community governance. |
Mulgan et al. (2007) | Innovative activities and services that are motivated by the goal of satisfying social needs that are essentially developed and disseminated through organizations with social purposes. |
Phills et al. (2008) | New solutions to respond to a social problem that are more effective, efficient, sustainable, or fair than previous solutions. The value created involves society in general rather than individuals. |
Zahra et al. (2008) | It is an activity and/or process that aims to discover, define, and exploit opportunities to create, in an innovative way, “social wealth” through new or existing organizations. |
Pol and Ville (2009) | New idea whose potential focuses on improving quality of life. |
Murray et al. (2010) | New ideas (products, services, and models) that meet social needs and increase society’s capacity to act. |
Dawson and Daniel (2010) | The goal of social innovation is to improve collective wellbeing. |
Bacq and Janssen (2011) | Social innovation is the result of the action of visionary individuals who can find innovative solutions to social problems in their community. |
Braga and Braga (2013) | Factor for organizations to achieve their goals. |
Cajaiba-Santana (2014) | What underlies the path of social innovation is not a social problem to be solved, but the social change it brings. |
Jiang and Thagard (2014) | Creative products and changes that are inspired by social needs and convey value to society by meeting those needs. |
Voorberg et al. (2015) | The creation of long-lasting outcomes that aim to address societal needs by shaping the relationships, positions, and rules between the involved stakeholders through an open process of participation, exchange and collaboration. |
Authors, Year of Publication | Total of Citations | |
---|---|---|
1 | (Swyngedouw 2005) | 493 |
2 | (Boons and Luedeke-Freund 2013) | 243 |
3 | (Dacin et al. 2011) | 184 |
4 | (Seyfang and Haxeltine 2012) | 181 |
5 | (Moulaert et al. 2005) | 153 |
6 | (Kanter 1999) | 150 |
7 | (Mumford 2002) | 117 |
8 | (Gonzalez and Healey 2005) | 106 |
9 | (Westley et al. 2013) | 84 |
10 | (Moore and Westley 2011) | 79 |
11 | (Maruyama et al. 2007) | 75 |
12 | (Tsemberis et al. 2003) | 75 |
13 | (Scott et al. 2005) | 68 |
14 | (Biggs et al. 2010) | 67 |
15 | (Gerometta et al. 2005) | 67 |
16 | (Moulaert and Nussbaumer 2005) | 66 |
17 | (Neumeier 2012) | 57 |
18 | (Cajaiba-Santana 2014) | 56 |
19 | (Young 2011) | 56 |
20 | (Craig and Pepler 1998) | 56 |
25 | (Menzel et al. 2007) | 51 |
26 | (Novy and Leubolt 2005) | 51 |
27 | (Seyfang and Longhurst 2013) | 49 |
28 | (Hunter et al. 2008) | 47 |
29 | (Marcy and Mumford 2007) | 43 |
30 | (Morokvasic 2004) | 43 |
31 | (Mont et al. 2014) | 42 |
32 | (Selsky and Parker 2010) | 42 |
33 | (Linton 2009) | 40 |
34 | (Moore et al. 2014) | 39 |
35 | (Dawson and Daniel 2010) | 35 |
36 | (Feola and Nunes 2014) | 33 |
37 | (Mumford and Moertl 2003) | 32 |
38 | (Phillips et al. 2015) | 31 |
39 | (Byrne et al. 2010) | 31 |
Total | Total of Papers | Total of Citations | Average Citations per Year |
---|---|---|---|
Urban Studies | 8 | 894 | 66.8 |
Creativity Research Journal | 12 | 374 | 30.79 |
Journal of Cleaner Production | 5 | 300 | 53.23 |
Ecology and Society | 13 | 294 | 45.93 |
Organization Science | 1 | 184 | 23 |
Environment and Planning C-Government and Policy | 2 | 182 | 26.19 |
American Journal of Community Psychology | 10 | 181 | 11.74 |
Harvard Business Review | 2 | 151 | 7.9 |
Journal of Business Ethics | 7 | 147 | 17.84 |
European Urban and Regional Studies | 6 | 126 | 14.21 |
International Journal of Technology Management | 7 | 106 | 11.99 |
Technovation | 4 | 98 | 10.34 |
Technological Forecasting and Social Change | 8 | 84 | 17.45 |
Futures | 7 | 83 | 12.91 |
Energy Policy | 3 | 82 | 7.65 |
Global Environmental Change-Human and Policy Dimensions | 2 | 82 | 14.77 |
Sociologia Ruralis | 3 | 62 | 9.81 |
Public Management Review | 2 | 58 | 14.35 |
Canadian Psychology-Psychologie Canadienne | 1 | 56 | 4.67 |
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1 | 56 | 7 |
Technology Analysis and Strategic Management | 3 | 56 | 10 |
Environmental Politics | 1 | 54 | 6 |
Journal of Business Research | 8 | 54 | 11.5 |
Regional Studies | 3 | 54 | 6.46 |
Business and Society | 1 | 53 | 5.89 |
Entrepreneurship and Regional Development | 1 | 52 | 5.78 |
Cluster 1—Environment and Urban Area | Cluster 2—Management and Entrepreneurship | Cluster 3—Research Methodologies |
---|---|---|
Research Policy (238 citations) Urban Studies (190 citations) Technological Forecasting and Social Change (110 citations) | Academy of Management Review (225 citations) Academy of Management Learning and Education (172 citations) | Creativity Research Journal (223 citations) Organization Studies (85 citations) |
Ecology and Society (110 citations) Futures (94 citations) Journal of Cleaner Production (92 citations) Energy Policy (90 citations) Internacional Handbook on Social Innovation: Colective Action (88 citations) Global Environmental Change-Human and Policy Dimensions (81 citations) Technology Analysis and Strategic Management (75 citations) European Urban and Regional Studies (71 citations) American Journal of Community Psychology (71 citations) International Journal of Urban and Regional Research (63 citations) Ecological Economics (62 citations) Sociologia Ruralis (61 citations) | Journal of Business Ethics (147 citations) Harvard Business Review (123 citations) Organization Science (111 citations) Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice (101 citations) Technology Analysis and Strategic Management (97 citations) Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly (89 citations) Journal of Business Research (83 citations) Administration in Social Work (73 citations) Jornal of Business Venturing (68 citations) Jornal of Management (69 citations) Techonovation (66 citations) Journal of Product Innovation Management (63 citations) Long Range Planning (61 citations) | Stanford Social Innovation Review (77 citations) American Journal of Sociology (72 citations) |
Author | Total of Papers | Total of Citations | Author | Total of Papers | Total of Citations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Swyngedouw, E. | 3 | 648 | Schultz, L. | 1 | 84 |
Westley, F. | 4 | 281 | Bodin, O. | 1 | 84 |
Gonzalez, S | 2 | 259 | Crona, B. | 1 | 84 |
Moulaert, F. | 5 | 255 | Branzei, O. | 2 | 79 |
Boons, F. | 1 | 243 | Le Ber, M. | 2 | 79 |
Luedeke-Freund, F. | 1 | 243 | Lida, T. | 1 | 75 |
Seyfang, G. | 3 | 243 | Shern, D. | 1 | 75 |
Mumford, M. | 3 | 217 | Maruyama, Y. | 1 | 75 |
Tracey, P. | 2 | 186 | Nishikido, M. | 1 | 75 |
Dacin, M. | 1 | 184 | Tsemberis, S. | 1 | 75 |
Dacin, P. | 1 | 184 | Moran, L. | 1 | 75 |
Haxeltine, A. | 1 | 181 | Shinn, M. | 1 | 75 |
Mumford, M. | 8 | 177 | Asmussen, S. | 1 | 75 |
Martinelli, F | 1 | 153 | Lonergan, D. | 1 | 68 |
Kanter, R. | 1 | 150 | Scott, G. | 1 | 68 |
Healey, P | 2 | 135 | Carpenter, S. | 1 | 67 |
Tjornbo, O. | 4 | 133 | Hausermann, H. | 1 | 67 |
Moore, M. | 4 | 128 | Gerometta, J. | 1 | 67 |
Olsson, P. | 3 | 125 | Biggs, R. | 1 | 67 |
Folke, C. | 1 | 84 | Longo, G. | 1 | 67 |
Cluster 1—Strategic Management and Entrepreneurship | Cluster 2—Social Innovation | Cluster 3—Globalization and Sustainability | Cluster 4—Architecture and Urbanism |
---|---|---|---|
Austin, J. (30 Citations) Bourdieu, P. (32 Citations) Dees, J. (44 Citations) Eisenhardt, K. (32 Citations) Mair, J. (48 Citations) Nicholls, A. (64 Citations) Porter, M. (41 Citations) Schumpeter, J. (42 Citations) Yin, R. (31 Citations) Zahra, S. (31 Citations) | European Commission (103 Citations) Howaldt, J. (57 Citations) Mulgan, G. (183 Citations) Munford, M. (141 Citations) OECD (52 Citations) Phills, A. (49 Citations) Pol, E. (36 Citations) | Geels, F. (72 Citations) Moore, M. (31 Citations) Seyfang, G. (88 Citations) Smith, A. (66 Citations) Westley, F. (52 Citations) | Healey, P. (30 Citations) Jessop, B. (42 Citations) Moulaert, F. (214 Citations) Swyngedouw, E. (36 Citations) |
Cluster 1—Governance and Sustainability | Cluster 2—Knowledge through Experience | Cluster 3—Collaboration Network | |||
Words | Word Number | Words | Word Number | Words | Word Number |
Governance | 41 | Entrepreneurship | 38 | Collaboration | 12 |
Innovation | 61 | Structure | 19 | Participation | 12 |
Management | 28 | Knowledge | 17 | Politics | 14 |
Politics | 38 | Performance | 24 | Social change | 12 |
Sustainability | 21 | Perspective | 24 | State | 12 |
Social innovation | 233 | Transformation | 19 | ||
Cluster 4—Social Responsibility | Cluster 5—Future Perspective | Cluster 6—Key Factors | |||
Words | Word Number | Words | Word Number | Words | Word Number |
Enterprise | 12 | Challenges | 12 | Community | 16 |
Model | 14 | Economy | 11 | Complexity | 9 |
Organizations | 25 | Science | 9 | Dynamics | 9 |
Social entrepreneurship | 33 | Technology | 11 | Institutional entrepreneurship | 8 |
Corporate social responsibility | 9 | Resilience | 13 | ||
Responsibility | 9 | ||||
Social enterprise | 10 |
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Martins, T.; Braga, A.; Ferreira, M.R.; Braga, V. Diving into Social Innovation: A Bibliometric Analysis. Adm. Sci. 2022, 12, 56. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12020056
Martins T, Braga A, Ferreira MR, Braga V. Diving into Social Innovation: A Bibliometric Analysis. Administrative Sciences. 2022; 12(2):56. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12020056
Chicago/Turabian StyleMartins, Tânia, Alexandra Braga, Marisa R. Ferreira, and Vítor Braga. 2022. "Diving into Social Innovation: A Bibliometric Analysis" Administrative Sciences 12, no. 2: 56. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12020056
APA StyleMartins, T., Braga, A., Ferreira, M. R., & Braga, V. (2022). Diving into Social Innovation: A Bibliometric Analysis. Administrative Sciences, 12(2), 56. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12020056