Beyond instrumentalism: Broadening the understanding of social innovation in socio-technical energy systems

J.M. Wittmayer, T. de Geus, B. Pel, F. Avelino, S. Hielscher, T. Hoppe, S. Mühlemeier, A. Stasik, S. Oxenaar, K.S. Rogge, V. Visser, E. Marín-González, M. Ooms, S. Buitelaar, C. Foulds, K. Petrick, S. Klarwein, S. Krupnik, G. de Vries, A. WagnerA. Härtwig

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Social innovation is an important dimension of current transformations in energy systems. It can refer to alternative business models, novel policy instruments, financing schemes, participatory governance approaches to energy questions, or new discourses. Its significance for energy systems is often considered in narrow instrumentalist terms, reducing it to a tool serving particular policy objectives. Grounding the concept in social science and humanities insights, this review essay proposes a broadened social innovation understanding. We propose 1) to open up the normative complexity of the concept; 2) to appreciate the multi-actor nature of social innovation; 3) to understand it as an analytical entry point for socio-material intertwinement; and, 4) to understand social innovation as premised on experimentalism-based intervention logics. The proposed social innovation understandings provide a broader imagination and strategizing of structural changes in energy systems.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101689
JournalEnergy Research and Social Science
Volume70
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2020
Externally publishedYes

Funding

The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 764056, PROSEU, No 826025, Energy-SHIFTS, and No 837498, SONNET. The authors would like to thank the three anonymous reviewers for their critical constructive comments.

Keywords

  • Energy transition
  • Multi-actor perspective
  • Normativity
  • Social innovation
  • Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH)
  • Transformative governance

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