INTI2016 161124 Les initiatives féminines dans les économies sociales et so...
Strasbourg2010 fernandez-miedes
1. Manuela Fernández Borrero, Lecturer of Social Psychology.
Universidad de Huelva (Spain) manuela.fernandez@ole.uhu.es
Blanca Miedes Ugarte, Professor of Applied Economy.
Universidad de Huelva (Spain ) miedes@uhu.es
Observatorio Local de Empleo. Universidad de Huelva , www.ole.uhu.es,
Technical Team Plan Integral Distrito 5 Huelva distrito5@valdocco.org
2. *EUROPEAN COMMISSION (2009): The World in 2025. Rising Asia and Socio-
Ecological Transition. Directorate-General for Research, Research*eu
http://ec.europa.eu/research/research-eu.
SOCIO-ECOLOGICAL
TRANSITION
The World in 2025 Report:
• Current societies face major economic and social tensions
that are demanding a socio-ecological transition at global
level.
• It is important to take into account the territorial dimension
of the causes and effects of these tensions.
• It is needed to strengthen mechanisms and instruments of
territorial governance to enable a more adapted transition to
population needs in each territory.
3. We need to promote a new socio-ecological
transition in order to change
• The metabolic profile (energy use, material use),
• The infrastructure,
• The range of technologies,
• The demographic reproduction,
• The environmental impact and regulatory positive and
negative feedbacks between the socio-economic system and
the natural environment.
• But perhaps most important thing is to promote a change in
the economic and governance structures.
Social Innovation
4. * MORALES GUTIÉRREZ, A. C. (2009a) "Innovación social y servicios sociales" Zerbitzuan.
Revista de Servicios Sociales, 45, 151-178.
Social Innovation
• It is a social developmnet action (that improves the
well-being and/or social cohesion).
• Which suposes an original change.
• It obtains qualitative transformations through
networking systems.
• It has to be reproducible*
5. Social Innovation Changes
Mental
processes:
creativity
and divergent
thought.
Instrumental
processes:
network,
organizational
system and
territorial
implication.
Behavioural
processes:
opening,
empathy,
tolerance and
risk.
Social
Processes:
divseristy,
transformation
and integration
processes
8. PLAN INTEGRAL DEL DISTRITO V
Territory: Peripherical arean in Huelva city (165.000 hab.)
Population: 20.000 hab. in 7 districts.
Is well recognized example of local governance, networking, civil participation in Combating
Poverty and Social Exclusion. X ANNIVERSARY in 2010.
Good Practice by United Nations (2008).
Good Practice in Torino (2003) in the
Second European Round Table on
Poverty and Social Exclusion.
Regional award: Voluntary network ing
(2010).
55 Diverse
actors
Bottom-up
approach.
Governance
and action-
research
9. EL PLAN INTEGRAL DEL DISTRITO V
2008-TODAY: SECOND STAGE
New structure. New entities/actors. New challenges.
2003-2008: FIRST STAGE
Awards. The city council leaves the plan ( 2004). Important results and challenges.
II Prospective seminary. Analisis and technical reports.
2002: DESIGN
Starting up. Entities and institutions adhesions (Regional and Local Goverment, ONG’).
2001: DIAGNOSIS
Multidimensional problems Need of integral actions I Prospective seminary
2000: DIAGNOSIS-DRAFT
VALDOCCO OLE (UHU)
11. PLAN INTEGRAL LIKE AN EXAMPLE OF SOCIAL AND
TERRITORIAL INNOVATION
The objetctive is not only overcoming problems and difficulties but the
generation of social and community dynamics that allow facing
creatively and effectively the challenges, to obtain empowerment.
RESOURCES AND
TERRITORY
LOCAL ACTORS
(PUBLIC AND
PRIVATE)
NETWORK
ORGANIZATION
INSTITUTIONAL
COOPERATION AND
CITIZENSHIP
INNOVACIÓN
Interaction +
learning and
transformation
12. GOBERNANCE STRUCTURE
MULTINIVEL. HETERARCHY
Agility, synergies,
METHODOLOGIES.
Analysis of threats and
risks.
Management of
conflicts.
Agreements
Participacion of very
diverse actors.
ACTION-RESEARCH.
EVALUATION.
Scientific foundation of
actions.
Shared construction of
actors capabilities.
POLITICAL
EMPOWERMENT
PROSPECTIVE VISION
Challenges
definition
Needs evaluation.
Actions planning
Transversal focus in
action.
Beyond participation,
D5 is social innovation
13. DEMOCRATIC
STRUCTURE.CITIZENSHIP
PARTICIPATION
Flowchart:
citizenship
accedes from the
forums and the
assembly.
Participation of
neighbour
associations.
Civil and
territorial needs.
PERMANENT AND LONG-
TERM DEVELOPMENT
Perspective
Behavioural and
social processes
Construction of
trust networks.
Development of
social capital
TERRITORIAL DIMENSION
Consideration of
the territorial
dimension.
The Territory like
object but
mainly as
subject
Beyond the participation,
D5 is social innovation
14. D5 is social innovation
Proximity
Wellbeing
Social Capital
Multinivel
governance
Democratic
Dynamic
Trust
networks
Continuity
Cooperative
work
Proactive
Quality of
life
It is not the panacea. Conflicts do exist, but D5 allows to
place them in a global perspective and to reduce
tensions …
15. PARTICIPATION FOR
A BETTER LIFE
TEN YEARS RESULTS
More than 30 projects,
approximately 3.600
involve PEOPLE each year.
More than 35 radio
interviews , more than 60
participative workshops
and meetings….
Health’s center
Regularization
Rehabilitation of
housings (1.400)
Employers'
organization
Fight against
absenteeism Dynamization
16. TEN YEARS RESULTS
Studies and scientifcs
papers. Participative-
action-research.
Youth: leisure,
sexuality, traffic …
Image’s change
Workshops of
autoesteem
Sports plan
17. WITH THIS INNOVATIVE PRACTICE
THE PLAN CONTINUES WORKING FOR …
To finish with social
exclusion
Management
of conflicts
To work with youth,
with women, elders …
Empowerment
To increase citizenship
participation
To obtain
institutional local
support/help
To develop new
technologies and
tools in diagnoses,
evaluations,
planning and
projects …
To solve in an integral way needs
and problems