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SEWF 2018
SEWF 2018 ACADEMIC SYMPOSIUM10-11th September / Glasgow
University Guidefor New Students
2013-14
YUNUS CENTREIMPROVING LIVES OF INDIVIDUALS AND COMMUNITIES: RESEARCHING THE IMPACT OF SOCIAL BUSINESS AND MICROCREDIT
University for the Common Good
FOREWORD
Welcome to the first Social Enterprise World Forum (SEWF) Academic Symposium!
On behalf of my colleagues and I and everyone at Glasgow Caledonian University, the University for the Common Good, I would especially like to extend a warm welcome to those who have travelled a long way to be with us here in Glasgow, and especially to those who are visiting Glasgow for the first time. Glaswegians are fiercely proud of our city – warts and all. We are renowned the world over for the warmth of our hospitality and Glasgow was recently recognised as the ‘Friendliest City in the World’ by Rough Guide magazine. Honestly: look it up online!
This Academic Symposium came about as a result of a number of conversations before, during and after SEWF 2017, held in Christchurch, New Zealand. By then we knew that the SEWF was going to be returning to Scotland in 2018, but there had long been a recognition within certain circles that academia was considered as happening in something of a ‘parallel universe’ to practitioners and policymakers. Essentially we wanted to bring the various worlds into discussion with each other, so we have three distinct, but overlapping, streams: research, teaching and public engagement. We have prominent researchers, teachers, policymakers and influencers from each area participating. I have long recognised that there are probably not enough opportunities for us to talk across these false silos we have created, missing opportunities for collaborative working and learning from each other along the way.
I am genuinely excited by the programme we have pulled together for you; from the diverse range of speakers from all corners of the globe, to the inspiring keynotes and the panel we have lined up for you. I should also mention too that we will host the John Pearce Memorial Lecture during the Symposium, which this year is being delivered by Baroness Glenys Thornton on Monday evening, someone who has lived and breathed the social enterprise movement in the UK, both inside and outside of government, over several decades. Immediately following her lecture, we will head down to the beautiful Glasgow City Chambers (a short ten-minute walk downhill) for a Civic Reception hosted by the City of Glasgow. Canapes and a selection of drinks, including our ‘other’ national drink, Irn Bru, will likely be on the menu there.
Following the end of the symposium on the Tuesday evening, many of you will visit The Experience, which is a short bus journey away. I don’t want to give too much away, but it really is a special place and I guarantee that you will have an Experience to remember.
I hope our Symposium sparks a long and fruitful dialogue on the topic of social enterprise, and that we all make a number of new and longstanding friendships. Please don’t hesitate to ask me or any of the team here if you need anything.
Yours aye,
Michael Roy PhD Chair, Social Enterprise World Forum Academic Symposium
University Guidefor New Students
2013-14
YUNUS CENTREIMPROVING LIVES OF INDIVIDUALS AND COMMUNITIES: RESEARCHING THE IMPACT OF SOCIAL BUSINESS AND MICROCREDIT
University for the Common Good
DAY-BY-DAY SCHEDULE
ADVANCING SOCIAL ENTERPRISE RESEARCH, TEACHING AND ENGAGEMENT
Monday 10th September
VENUE: George Moore Building / Glasgow Caledonian University / Cowcaddens Road / Glasgow G4 0BA
09:00 Registration and Coffee
10:00 Conference Opens (Deeprose Lecture Theatre)
ɪ Michael Roy, Glasgow Caledonian University, Symposium Chair
10:10 Welcome address
ɪ Cam Donaldson, Yunus Chair in Social Business and Health and Pro-Vice Chancellor (Research) of Glasgow Caledonian University
10:30 Keynote Lecture 1
ɪ Diane Holt, University of Essex
What can the Global South teach us about social enterprise?
11:30 Parallel Session 1 (Deeprose + classrooms)
13:00 Lunch (George Moore Restaurant)
14:00 Parallel Session 2 (Deeprose + classrooms)
DAY-BY-DAY SCHEDULE
15:30 Coffee break (George Moore Restaurant)
16:00 Keynote Lecture 2
ɪ Jo Barraket, Swinburne University of Technology
Doing meaningful research, making research meaningful
17:00 Closing Remarks and Day 1 close
17:00 Buffet evening meal
18:00 4th John Pearce Memorial Lecture - Glenys Thornton, The Baroness Thornton, Senior Fellow, The Young Foundation
The history and potential of social enterprise and co-operatives for community well-being
19:30 - 19:45
Walk to Glasgow City Chambers, George Square, Glasgow
20:00 - 21:00
Civic reception (Glasgow City Chambers, George Square)
Monday 10th September (continued)
DAY-BY-DAY SCHEDULE
VENUE: George Moore Building / Glasgow Caledonian University / Cowcaddens Road / Glasgow G4 0BA
09:30 Keynote Lecture 3
ɪ Alex Hannant, Griffith University (former CEO Ākina Foundation)
A journey from practice to academia (and back again?)
10:30 Coffee break (George Moore Restaurant)
11:00 Parallel Session 3 (Deeprose + classrooms)
12:30 Lunch (George Moore Restaurant)
13:30 Parallel Session 4 (Deeprose + classrooms)
15:00 ɪ Panel: Jo Barraket (Chair), James Austin (Harvard Business School), Simon Teasdale (Glasgow Caledonian University), Marty Donkervoort (University of Winnipeg) and Mary O’Shaughnessy (University College, Cork and EMES International Research Network)
Advancing Research, Teaching and Engagement in social enterprise: what do we need to do next?
16:30 Close of symposium
Tuesday 11th September
DAY-BY-DAY SCHEDULE
ADDITIONAL PROGRAMME SPONSORED BY KIBBLE GROUP
18:30 Evening Reception with Food and Drink and Electric Go-karting
at the Experience with SEWF participants who will have been on social enterprise tours. After two days in the venue, it’s your chance to get behind the wheel!
Tuesday 11th September (continued)
PARALLEL SESSION 1
Stream 1A – Researching Social Enterprise Deeprose Lecture Theatre
ɪ Chair: Sharon Zivkovic
Prapin Nuchpiam
National Institute of Development Administration, Thailand
A Comparative Analysis of Legal Infrastructure for Social Enterprise in ASEAN
Beth Weaver University of Strathclyde, UK
Co-producing Desistance? The role of social cooperatives in supporting social integration and desistance
Ellen StenslieNorwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway
Cleaning up the economy; how environmental social enterprises organise to create sustainable business models
Monday 10th September / 11.30 – 13.00
Stream 1B – Researching Social Enterprise Room A426, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: Mary O’Shaughnessy
Gillian Murray Glasgow Caledonian University, UK
CommonHealth
Henrietta Sherwin Bath School of Management, UK
Grappling with the diversity of social enterprise
Rachel TaylorSwinburne University of Technology, Australia
Positive relationships and wellbeing in social enterprise
Monday 10th September / 11.30 – 13.00 (continued)
PARALLEL SESSION 1
PARALLEL SESSION 1
Stream 2 – Teaching Social enterprise Room A426F, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: Marty Donkervoort
Crina Tanongon University of the Philippines
Storytelling as an engaging approach in teaching social Entrepreneurship
David Bozward Royal Agricultural University, Cirencester
Using the agri-food sector as an exemplar for teaching social enterprise
Jacen Greene Portland State University, US
Improving Equity and Diversity in Social Entrepreneurship Education
Monday 10th September / 11.30 – 13.00 (continued)
Monday 10th September / 11.30 – 13.00 (continued)
Stream 3 – Engaging with Social Enterprise Room A426C, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: Mandy Bratton
Murad Canbulut Altinbas University
To engage or not to engage: The case of a failed attempt to establish a social innovation lab
Belinda Bell University of Cambridge, UK
Welcoming diversity in social entrepreneurs – lessons from Cambridge Social Ventures
Dicle Yurdakul Altinbas UniversitySocial Entrepreneurship for Sustainable Urban Development
Jonathan Blyth and Hannah Harris
Plymouth College of Art, UK
Purposeful Learning Creates Agency
PARALLEL SESSION 1
PARALLEL SESSION 2
Stream 1A – Researching Social Enterprise Deeprose Lecture Theatre
ɪ Chair: Richard Hull
Karen Gongora University of Twente, Netherlands
Landscape of Social Entrepreneurship
Rokhima Rostiani Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia
Women’s dynamic on social business in rural areas in Indonesia
Danielle Byrne Trinity College, Dublin‘True Maps’ - mapping social enterprises in Ireland and Vietnam
Monday 10th September / 14.00 – 15.30
PARALLEL SESSION 2
Stream 1B – Researching Social Enterprise Room A426, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: Fergus Lyon
Tina Facca Miess John Carroll University, USA
Social Enterprises and the Solidarism Economics of Heinrich Pesch, S.J.
Filip Majetic and Drazen Simlesa
Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar, Croatia
Management Practices at Work Integration Social Enterprises (WISEs) in Croatia
Thamina Anwar Trade Not Riba dot Com, New Zealand
Financial Inclusion of Marginalised People, Islamic Social Entrepreneurship and the Potentials of the Waqf-Ise Model
Monday 10th September / 14.00 – 15.30 (continued)
PARALLEL SESSION 2
Stream 2 – Teaching Social enterprise Room A426F, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: Marty Donkervoort
Ioana Ramia UNSW Sydney, Australia
Educating social enterprises about the importance of, and approaches to, impact measurement
Robin Dick Central Queensland University, Australia
iChange
Elizabeth Cory-Pearce and Antonia Sama
Tavistock Institute of Human Relations & Canterbury Christ Church University, UK
Applying a game-based group experiential learning approach to the teaching of social entrepreneurship in Higher Education
M Setiawan Kusmulyono
Universitas Prasetiya Mulya
What Should the Social Entrepreneurship Course Do? To Create or to Inspire?
Monday 10th September / 14.00 – 15.30 (continued)
PARALLEL SESSION 2
Monday 10th September / 14.00 – 15.30 (continued)
Stream 3 – Engaging with Social Enterprise Room A426C, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: Alex Hannant
Katri-Liis Reimann, Sarah Soppitt, Nicholas Spencer, Jillis Kors
Tallinn University, Estonia; University of Northumbria, UK
Where there is the Will there is a Way: The International Replicability of Social Enterprise
Mandy Bratton University of California San Diego, USA
Paradigm Shifts in Partnerships -from service to social enterprise
Siobhan McQuaid Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
Temporary innovation systems: engaging citizens and social enterprise in a flexible and responsive approach to complex climate change challenges
PARALLEL SESSION 3
Stream 1A – Researching Social Enterprise Deeprose Lecture Theatre
ɪ Chair: Gillian Murray
Deidré van Rooyen University of the Free State, South Africa
Hybrid social entrepreneurial organisations as institutions: a case in Eastern Cape, South Africa
Fergus Lyon University of Middlesex, UK
Navigating the social, environmental and commercial objectives of social enterprise
Geoff Whitta and Fiona Henderson
Glasgow Caledonian University, UK
Social Innovation in Rural Social Enterprises: Challenges and Opportunities
Richard Hull Goldsmiths University of London, UK
Democratising Markets: A potential role for social enterprise
Tuesday 11th September / 11.00 – 12.30
Stream 1B – Researching Social Enterprise Room A426, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: Steve Rolfe
Adam ScottSwinburne University of Technology, Australia
Goal Related Tensions within Australian Environmental Social Enterprises
Julie Wilson and Karen Elliott
Newcastle University, UK
Making time for an entrepreneurial cuddle: Understanding the value of interpersonal relationships in supporting nascent social entrepreneurs
Jatta Muhonen Heriot-Watt University, UK
Supporting the Development of Social Enterprises and Entrepreneurs: Evidence from Scotland
PARALLEL SESSION 3
Tuesday 11th September / 11.00 – 12.30 (continued)
PARALLEL SESSION 3
Stream 2 – Teaching Social enterprise Room A426F, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: James Austin
Juliet Cornford British Council, UK
Teaching young people about openness, co-operation, and re-investment of wealth
Ray O’Brien and Samuel Mann
Otago Polytechnic, New Zealand
Purposeful change-makers: Design and implementation of a Bachelor of Leadership for Change
Samuel Lee and Erika Lee
HKCT Institute of Higher Education and The Hong Kong Baptist University
How do students across developmental thresholds learn about social enterprise in a more effective manner?
Tuesday 11th September / 11.00 – 12.30 (continued)
PARALLEL SESSION 3
Tuesday 11th September / 11.00 – 13.20 (continued)
Stream 3 – Engaging with Social Enterprise Room A426C, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: Tristan Ace
Ying-hao Huang National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan
Experiences and Reflections of Indigenous Solidarity Economy Projects in Taiwan
Adelaide SheikJohannesburgh Business School, South Africa
The emerging phenomenon of Social Value Creation in Africa
Samuel Barco Sokio Coop, SpainInternationalisation policy and Social Entrepreneurship: the last frontier
Mark Majewsky Anderson
Glasgow Caledonian University, UK
Social Innovation and Knowledge Exchange: How Universities can support Social Innovation more effectively
PARALLEL SESSION 4
Stream 1A – Researching Social Enterprise Deeprose Lecture Theatre
ɪ Chair: Gillian Murray
Amee Yostrakul Edge Hill University, UK
The role of a social enterprise on community well-being: an Exploratory Case Study on Homebaked Community Land Trust and Co-operative Bakery
Silvia Pinheiro University of Essex
Co-management and Community Forest Management in the Brazilian Amazon
Geraldine Hall University of South Wales, UK
Applying MacIntyre’s definition of a practice to elaborate on Pearce’s theory of social enterprise
Steve Rolfe University of Stirling
‘Long and thickly populated’ – examining complex causal pathways between social enterprises and people who use their services
Tuesday 11th September / 13.30 – 15.00
Stream 1B – Researching Social Enterprise Room A426, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: Samuel Barco
Tiziana Crispino University of Calabria, Italy
Policies for social innovation and social enterprises for the management of public goods: the case of Southern Italy
Xiaolu Wang and Tristan Ace
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University and British Council
Social Enterprises in efficiency-driven economies: A cross-country comparison in Asia
Yvonne von Friedrichs and Cecilia Dalborg
Mid Sweden University, Sweden
The Times They Are a-Changing: prerequisites for social entrepreneurship in rural Sweden
PARALLEL SESSION 4
Tuesday 11th September / 13.30 – 15.00 (continued)
PARALLEL SESSION 4
Stream 2 – Teaching Social enterprise Room A426F, Govan Mbeki Building
ɪ Chair: James Austin
Sharon Zivkovic Community capacity Builders, Australia
Teaching social enterprise: a problem understanding and diverse knowledges approach
Nils-Petter Karlsson University of South-Eastern Norway
Social Entrepreneurship in Social Work Higher Education: A case of using student enterprises as an examination alternative in professional social work education in Norway
Cindy Mitchell University of Canberra, Australia
Assuring the Future of ‘Good’ Capitalism: Social Enterprise and Work Integrated Learning
Sheng-Tsung Samuel Hou
Feng Chia University, Taiwan
Flipped Taxi Industry through Chinese Wangdao Approach: The Case of Taiwan Taxi Academy Association
Tuesday 11th September / 13.30 – 15.00 (continued)
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Alex Hannant
Director, Pocketknife Ltd
Alex works on number of projects supporting innovation and enterprise for social impact. This includes Interim Director of the Yunus Social Business Centre at Griffith University, in Australia, and advisory services to the New Zealand Government. Alex also serves on the Boards of B Lab Australia and New Zealand, the NZ Advisory Board for Impact Investment, and is Chair of Pomegranate Kitchen - a social enterprise supporting former refugees. Up until the end of 2017, Alex was CEO of the Ākina Foundation, New Zealand’s primary development organisation for social enterprise. Before that, based in the UK, he was Director of Programmes at LEAD - a global network focussed on leadership and sustainable development - and also Head of Partnerships at the Climate and Development Knowledge Network (CDKN). Alex holds a Masters of International Development with distinction from Victoria University of Wellington, where he also guest lectures on social enterprise.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Diane Holt
Professor of Management, Essex Business School
Professor Diane Holt (BSc, MSc, PhD) joined Essex Business School in November 2013. Previously she held posts at Queen’s University Belfast (2007-2013) and Middlesex University Business School (1996-2007). She has published over 100 peer reviewed journal articles, book chapters and conference papers in areas such as social entrepreneurship, hybrid businesses, green supply chain management, the role of business in development, sustainability discourse, and ecopreneuring. She is the principal investigator on the ESRC funded Trickle Out Africa Project (2011 – present) which considers the impact of social and environmental enterprises on poverty alleviation and sustainable development across the 19 countries of Southern and Eastern Africa. The online Trickle Out Directory now lists over 2000 social purpose ventures. She is also the UK host of a Newton Advanced Fellowship with Dr Silvia Pinheiro from Brazil on “Inclusion and formalization of Amazonian informal entrepreneurs into MNC value chains - mechanisms, partnerships and impacts.” She is a member of the ESRC peer review college, a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and a member of the British Council social science funding panel.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Dr. James Austin
Professor of Business Administration, Emeritus Harvard Business School
Dr. James Austin is the Eliot I. Snider and Family Professor of Business Administration, Emeritus at the Harvard Business School.
He was the Co-Founder and Chairman of the HBS Social Enterprise Initiative. His doctorate and MBA degrees with distinction are from Harvard. His BBA with High Distinction is from the University of Michigan. He has authored and edited 28 books, dozens of articles and hundreds of cases studies, many in the areas of social entrepreneurship and cross-sector collaboration. He is recognized internationally as a pioneering expert on social enterprise, collaboration, and management in developing countries.
Professor Austin has received a variety of awards for his work. He has been an advisor to corporations, social enterprises, nonprofit organizations, and governments throughout the world, including serving as a Special Advisor to the White House. He is also one of the founding leaders of the Social Enterprise Knowledge Network (SEKN).
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Dr. Mary O’Shaughnessy
Lecturer, Cork University Business School
Dr. Mary O’Shaughnessy is a lecturer at Cork University Business School (CUBS), University College, Cork, Ireland (UCC). Her research interests include sustainable rural development, social enterprise and community led social entrepreneurship. She is the academic director of the NUI BSc Rural Development (Distance Learning) and is the UCC PI on two Marie Sklodowska - Curie Research Projects on the topic of Co-operative and Sustainable Rural Development, Rural Entrepreneurship and Social Innovation for Rural/Regional Development. She was appointed the Short Term Scientific Mission Manager (STSM) to the EU COST Action Empowering the next generation of social enterprise scholars in 2018. Mary is currently serving a second term on the boards of the EMES International Research Network on social enterprises, Micro Finance Ireland and the HOPE Cork/India based NGO. She is a member of Ireland’s national Social Enterprise Task force and a member of the social enterprise policy advisory group to Ireland¹s Department of Rural and Community Development.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Jo Barraket
Professor & Director, Centre for Social Impact Swinburne (CSI) and National Research Director (CSI Network)
Jo Barraket is Professor and Director of the Centre for Social Impact (CSI) Swinburne and National Research Director of the CSI Network. She’s Australia’s premier researcher of social enterprise, which has been her core area of research for over 20 years. Jo has published more than 50 articles and books and has led many research projects on social enterprise, including studies funded by the Australian Research Council and evaluations of government initiatives, such as the Social Enterprise Development and Investment Funds. Jo is passionate about progressive social change and the role of innovation in the social economy in achieving this. In addition to her work with CSI, Jo is the Chairperson of CERES Environment Park in Melbourne.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Marty Donkervoort
Course Instructor, University of Winnipeg
Over the past three decades, Marty has held senior positions in the private corporate, public and social economy sectors. Marty has published a number of articles on social enterprise and worker cooperatives. His book “Inner City Renovation: How a Social Enterprise Changes Lives and Communities”, was published in 2013. Since 2011, he has been teaching various business courses on social enterprise, sustainability, and management in the non-profit sector at the University of Winnipeg and in the Asper MBA program at the University of Manitoba. Marty’s contributions have been celebrated by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), who named him “A Canadian making a Difference” in 2009 and by Ernst and Young as a Prairie Region Finalist in the 2010 Entrepreneur of the Year competition. He was also awarded a special recognition award for his work in the social economy by Ernst and Young in 2010. In 2015, the World Corporate Social Responsibility Congress recognised him as one of the most talented social innovators. Marty Donkervoort holds a B.Sc.F. in timber engineering (University of Toronto) and a M.B.A. with an emphasis on marketing (Schulich School of Business, York University).
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Dr Michael Roy
Senior Lecturer – Social Business, Glasgow Caledonian University
Dr Michael Roy is Senior Lecturer in Social Business at the Yunus Centre for Social Business and Health, Glasgow Caledonian University, UK. Since being established in 2010, the Yunus Centre has rapidly grown to become one of the largest, and most important, centres for the study of social enterprise in the world. Dr Roy is an economic sociologist and public policy specialist, with specific expertise in studying the health and well-being impacts of social enterprise-led activity, publishing extensively on this topic in major international scientific journals such as Social Science and Medicine and Public Management Review. He has also written on policy ‘ecosystems’ of support for social enterprise, and on Social Impact Bonds, which the subject of a recent paper in Stanford Social Innovation Review. He is Programme Leader for a Master’s programme in Social Business and Microfinance, which attracts students from all around the world and he has participated in a wide variety of panels and conferences internationally, including in the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Thailand, India and all across Europe. Dr Roy’s research has been funded by the OECD, the ILO, the European Commission, the UK’s Medical Research Council and Economic and Social Research Council, Employment and Social Development Canada, the Scottish Government and the Swiss Government. He has participated at conferences on the social economy at the invitation of both the Italian Government and the Slovak Government on the occasion of their presidencies of the EU Council. He is Deputy Editor in Chief of Social Enterprise Journal, and is on the board of Voluntas: the International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations. He was awarded the Helen Potter Award of Special Recognition for 2017 by the Association for Social Economics based in the USA.
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Supporting communities
Ethical event management
Social enterprise policy and development
Sustainable supply chain development
Training and study visits
Expanding internationally
Microfinance for Scottish enterprises
Proud organisers of SEWF 2018Growing social enterprises
www.ceis.org.uk@CEISGroup
Simon Teasdale
Professor of Public Policy and Organisations, Glasgow Caledonian University
Simon Teasdale PhD is Professor of Public Policy and Organisations at Glasgow Caledonian University’s Yunus Centre for Social Business and Health, and Editor in Chief of Social Enterprise Journal. He is currently editing A Research Agenda for Social Entrepreneurship with Professor Anne de Bruin. His own research focuses on how social enterprises navigate, shape, and are shaped by, public policies. Simon has been awarded over $5 million of competitive research funding by bodies such as the UK’s Economic and Social Research Council. His research has been published in field-leading journals such as Economy and Society, Journal of Social Policy and Policy and Politics. He has advised UK and Scottish governments on strategy related to social enterprise, most recently helping with the creation of a Social Innovation Fund in Scotland for which he now sits on the award panel. He has played a major role in the development of the social enterprise research community in the UK, through his involvement in the editorial team for Social Enterprise Journal and the Organising Committee for the annual International Social Innovation Research Conference.
Supporting communities
Ethical event management
Social enterprise policy and development
Sustainable supply chain development
Training and study visits
Expanding internationally
Microfinance for Scottish enterprises
Proud organisers of SEWF 2018Growing social enterprises
www.ceis.org.uk@CEISGroup
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