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  4. Looking for a needle in a haystack : how to search for bottom‐up social innovations that solve complex humanitarian problems
 
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Looking for a needle in a haystack : how to search for bottom‐up social innovations that solve complex humanitarian problems

Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.2438
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2019-08-28
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Kruse, Daniel Johannes 
Goeldner, Moritz  orcid-logo
Data Driven Innovation W-EXK2  
Eling, Katrin  
Herstatt, Cornelius  
Institut
Technologie- und Innovationsmanagement W-7  
TORE-DOI
10.15480/882.2438
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/3575
Journal
The journal of product innovation management  
Volume
36
Issue
6
Start Page
671
End Page
694
Citation
Journal of Product Innovation Management 6 (36): 671-694 (2019)
Publisher DOI
10.1111/jpim.12507
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85074200660
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
The worldwide increase in societal challenges is putting pressure on humanitarian organizations to develop sophisticated approaches to leverage social innovations in the humanitarian sector. Since humanitarian problems are complex problems, with the relevant knowledge being hidden, organizational search theory advocates the application of bottom‐up and theory‐guided search processes to identify the social innovations that solve these. Unfortunately, there has been no theoretical attention to understanding which approaches apply in this context. Further, established theory‐guided bottom‐up search processes, such as the lead user method, are unsuitable to the humanitarian sector, and we lack practice examples of adequate search processes. To start addressing this gap in theory and practice, procedural action research was done with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies to develop a theory‐guided bottom‐up innovation search process for the real‐life humanitarian problem of recurring floods in Indonesia. It revealed that an innovation search process for this context must differ significantly concerning its objectives and the steps to be taken from the lead user method, which was used as a starting point. Further, a comparison of the technical quality and the social impacts of the identified social innovations with social innovations identified through a non‐theory‐guided bottom‐up search process (i.e., an innovation contest) suggests the superiority of this theory‐guided search process. With this conclusion and the insights derived throughout the development of the search process, this study makes important contributions to theory development in the social and open innovation literatures and delivers important recommendations for social innovation practice in the humanitarian sector.
DDC Class
330: Wirtschaft
360: Soziale Probleme, Sozialarbeit
650: Management
Funding(s)
Projekt DEAL  
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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