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Social enterprise, health and wellbeing: theory, method and practice
In: Routledge studies in social enterprise & social innovation 14
"In recent decades, governments have promoted social enterprise as a mean to address welfare and tackle disadvantage. Early academic work on social enterprises reflected this development and engaged with their ability to deliver and create jobs, work towards remedial environmental goals and address a range of societal challenges. More recently, researchers have started to investigate the broader potential of social enterprise for the wellbeing of people and the planet. In this context, this book aims to answer the question: In what ways can social enterprises improve the health and wellbeing of individuals and communities? The chapters in this edited collection take different perspectives on assessing how social enterprises address disadvantage and deliver health and wellbeing impacts. Drawing on evidence from international research studies, Social Enterprise, Health and Wellbeing: Theory Method and Practice presents the 'first wave' of innovative research on this topic and provides a platform of evidence to inspire the next generation of scholarly and policy interest. Drawing on the cutting edge of interdisciplinary research in the field, this book will be of interest to researchers, academics, policymakers, and students in the fields of entrepreneurship, public and social policy, community development, public health, human geography and urban planning."
Engage, participate, empower: modelling power transfer in disadvantaged rural communities
In: Steiner , A A & Farmer , J 2018 , ' Engage, participate, empower: modelling power transfer in disadvantaged rural communities ' , Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space , vol. 36 , no. 1 , pp. 118-138 . https://doi.org/10.1177/2399654417701730
This article explores a process meant to empower disadvantaged communities that have not previously engaged in government-instigated civic projects. Drawing on a large exploratory study of an empowerment project in seven Scottish rural communities, findings include that empowering communities should harness community development techniques that use both external actors and sources of support (i.e. exogenous practices), and those that utilise assets from within the community (i.e. endogenous practices). The paper presents the Engagement-Participation-Empowerment Model showing stages in transferring power from external actors to local communities. The paper highlights that the process of community empowerment starts with engagement and follows with participation – both representing a precondition of community empowerment. The paper indicates that there are limits to which community members are capable of embracing current community empowerment policies and showing that even targeted 'well-tailored' community empowerment programmes might fail. Implications of the study for further research and policy are identified.
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Engage, participate, empower: Modelling power transfer in disadvantaged rural communities
In: Environment and planning. C, Politics and space, Band 36, Heft 1, S. 118-138
ISSN: 2399-6552
Abstract This article explores a process meant to empower disadvantaged communities that have not previously engaged in government-instigated civic projects. Drawing on a large exploratory study of an empowerment project in seven Scottish rural communities, findings include that empowering communities should harness community development techniques that use both external actors and sources of support (i.e. exogenous practices), and those that utilise assets from within the community (i.e. endogenous practices). The paper presents the Engagement-Participation-Empowerment Model showing stages in transferring power from external actors to local communities. The paper highlights that the process of community empowerment starts with engagement and follows with participation – both representing a precondition of community empowerment. The paper indicates that there are limits to which community members are capable of embracing current community empowerment policies and showing that even targeted 'well-tailored' community empowerment programmes might fail. Implications of the study for further research and policy are identified.
Moderating mental health: Addressing the human–machine alignment problem through an adaptive logic of care
In: New Media & Society
ISSN: 1461-7315
Covid-19 deepened the need for digital-based support for people experiencing mental ill-health. Discussion platforms have long filled gaps in health service provision and access, offering peer-based support usually maintained by a mix of professional and volunteer peer moderators. Even on dedicated support platforms, however, mental health content poses difficulties for human and machine moderation. While automated systems are considered essential for maintaining safety, research is lagging in understanding how human and machine moderation interacts when addressing mental health content. Working with three digital mental health services, we examine the interaction between human and automated moderation of discussion platforms, contrasting 'reactive' and 'adaptive' moderation practices. Presenting ways forward for improving digital mental health services, we argue that an integrated 'adaptive logic of care' can help manage the interaction between human and machine moderators as they address a tacit 'risk matrix' when dealing with sensitive mental health content.
'Housing risk' and the neoliberal discourse of responsibilisation in Victoria
In: Critical social policy: a journal of theory and practice in social welfare, Band 35, Heft 3, S. 393-413
ISSN: 1461-703X
The article examines the representation of housing risk in contemporary Australian policy discourse through a critical analysis of two policy texts from the recent Victorian Coalition government (2010–2014). Drawing on governmentality theory and contemporary debates on neoliberalism, it examines how these policy texts perpetuate a discourse in which 'housing risk' is primarily understood as an issue for individuals to manage, rather than as an issue with predominantly structural roots. It then explores how this particular neoliberal representation of 'housing risk' supports policy solutions that ultimately responsibilise individuals through a narrow focus on education and employment as the pathways to independence in the private housing market. The article argues that this situation is problematic in a context of increasing rates of homelessness and diminished access to affordable housing across Australia.
Improving access to information for nursing staff in remote areas: the potential of the Internet and other networked information resources
In: International journal of information management, Band 19, Heft 1, S. 49-62
ISSN: 0268-4012
Community responses to family violence: Charting policy outcomes using novel data sources, text mining & topic modelling - Project SOPHIA
For public policies to achieve social change, they must increase awareness, community engagement and uptake of information about the target social issue. This project aimed to assess the extent to which changes in public awareness and engagement could be detected in response to Victorian Family Violence policy. Detecting community-wide change in attitudes or awareness over a short time frame (2014–18) is significantly challenging. Novel data sources and emerging data analytics techniques were used to chart the breadth of public discussion of family violence and chart change over this time period in response to the Victorian Government's Royal Commission into Family Violence (2015–16). The research applies computational techniques (including natural language processing using Latent Dirichlet Allocation topic modelling) and timeline analysis to present: Analysis of how people speak about family violence, in relation to which topics, and how these discussions change over time; Visual depictions of public engagement with family violence language and topics within social media and news media, showing changes over time against policy, campaign, research and events timelines; and New replicable methodology using social media and news data, for charting community attitudes and discourse over time and against policy timelines. Analysis of policy documents, social media and news media conversations between 2014 and 2018 in relation to the Family Violence Royal Commission, found that: The public conversation about family violence has changed in response to the 2015-2016 Royal Commission into Family Violence. Family violence incidents do not provoke public attention in the same way that violence against women in public places does. Gaining better access to community-wide responses shines a light on the often-hidden attitudes, language and experiences of those who perpetrate or are affected by family violence. When people talk about the impact of family violence on social media, they highlight the multifaceted nature of abuse and abusive relationships. While negative attitudes and violence-supporting statements remain a part of the public conversation, these statements are often called out by others on social media. The influence of community leaders shines through, but not always constructively. Government can use these research techniques to adapt policy responses and tailor language to more effectively connect with the public.
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Data for Social Good: Non-Profit Sector Data Projects
In: Springer eBook Collection
Data for Social Good: Non-Profit Sector Data Projects
This open access book provides practical guidance for non-profits and community sector organisations about how to get started with data analytics projects using their own organisations' datasets and open public data. The book shares best practices on collaborative social data projects and methodology. For researchers, the work offers a playbook for partnering with community organisations in data projects for public good and gives worked examples of projects of various sizes and complexity.
From passive welfare to community governance: Youth NGOs in Australia and Scotland
In: Children and youth services review: an international multidisciplinary review of the welfare of young people, Band 32, Heft 3, S. 430-436
ISSN: 0190-7409
Informing Debate or Fuelling Dispute? Media Communication of Reconfiguration in Scotland's Rural Maternity Care
In: Social policy and administration, Band 42, Heft 7, S. 789-812
ISSN: 1467-9515
AbstractPublic reaction to the UK's ongoing health sector reform often results in dilution of policy‐makers' goals. Public participation in health service decision‐making is advocated in policy, but precisely how to do it and what role public opinion should have in formulating reform strategy is ambiguously described. Public opinion is formed through many influences, including media reporting. This paper examines how reconfiguration at a rural maternity unit at Caithness General Hospital in Wick, Scotland, was communicated in national and local media and considers potential implications of media communication on public participation in policy decision‐making. Content analysis of arguments for and against change revealed a high level of reporting of commentators against change in regional newspapers. Qualitative analysis identified emergent themes about how maternity service reconfiguration was portrayed. These included framing opposition between management and local people, and change drivers receiving superficial coverage. Findings suggest that media portrayal of the public role in change may promote an adversarial rather than a participative stance. More finely tuned understanding of the relationship between the reporting of change and public reaction should be attained as this could affect how planned social policy evolves into actual practice.
Informing Debate or Fuelling Dispute? Media Communication of Reconfiguration in Scotland's Rural Maternity Care
In: Social policy & administration: an international journal of policy and research, Band 42, Heft 7, S. 789-812
ISSN: 0037-7643, 0144-5596
Do community empowerment and enabling state policies work in practice? Insights from a community development intervention in rural Scotland
In: Markantoni , M , Steiner , A , Meador , J E & Farmer , J 2018 , ' Do community empowerment and enabling state policies work in practice? Insights from a community development intervention in rural Scotland ' , Geoforum , vol. 97 , 97 (2018) , pp. 142-154 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2018.10.022
In the transition from welfare to 'enabling' states, governments move away from their previous roles as providers of services. Individuals and communities as collectives of individuals are encouraged to play a more active role in improving their own wellbeing and resilience, thus shifting from dependence on the state to self-reliance. This proposed transformation is highly complex and poorly understood. We question whether government interventions and policies aimed at strengthening community empowerment can lead to an enabling state. By examining externally funded community projects in six rural Scottish villages, we investigate whether these development initiatives helped to improve socio-economic aspects related to community resilience. We used uni/bivariate and multivariate analysis with data from 345 structured interviews. Our results show that those communities where projects were completed had a higher average social resilience than the communities where projects remained incomplete. Social resilience factors, including social ties and networks, were predictors of completing community projects. Our results indicate that some communities are harder to activate and require external state support which addresses local needs so that these communities play a more active civic role. If states seek 'resilient communities', interventions must be co-designed with citizens to create conditions that will engage and enable people to take more control of aspects of their future, including those communities with a history of minimal civic participation.
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The social enterprise as a space of well-being: an exploratory case study
In: Social enterprise journal, Band 11, Heft 3, S. 281-302
ISSN: 1750-8533
Purpose– The purpose of this paper is to present an Australian case study and to explore how social enterprises may be conceptualised as spaces of well-being, that is the ways in which social enterprises, not explicitly delivering health services, may be producing health and well-being benefits for those who come into contact with them.Design/methodology/approach– A case study in Australia is used to explore in depth the mechanisms of well-being production. Data were collected using ethnographic observation, focus groups and walking interviews. Data were analysed using thematic analysis, GIS and the lens of therapeutic assemblage.Findings– The case study social enterprise produces well-being as integration, capability, security and therapy. The social enterprise acts as a therapeutic assemblage with well-being "spoken", "practiced" and "felt" within the social enterprise. The ways in which well-being is generated are often linked to the productive element of enterprise – and have the potential to contribute to tackling several contemporary health challenges and inequalities relating to, for example, a lack of physical activity and levels of social isolation.Research limitations/implications– This paper draws on a single Australian case study but points to the need for further in-depth work in the area of social enterprise and health.Originality/value– The paper advances our understanding of how social enterprises may be linked to health and well-being. It goes beyond quantification of, for example, number of clients helped, to consider the wider experience of well-being for those who come into contact with social enterprises.