Governance and Movement Governance and Movement Building Building
Jan 04, 2016
Governance and Movement Governance and Movement BuildingBuilding
World Social Forum World Social Forum Belem, Amazonia, Belem, Amazonia, BrazilBrazil
“Another World is Possible, Another Economy is Necessary”
Over 100 workshops on Building a Solidarity Economy, 100,000 participants.
Major focus on social economy as alternative model of development.
National Hub National Hub ResearchResearch
Advancing the Social Economy for Socio-economic Development (2009) Tremblay
• Public Policy Trends and Instruments (2010) Tremblay
• Governance and Movement Building for the Social Economy in Canada (2010) Downing and Charron
Summit on a People Summit on a People Centered EconomyCentered Economy
• Engagement with stakeholders on how to strengthen the movement and the public policy environment nationally and in regions
• Emerging “Big Tent” Coalition• Declaration• Next steps to be determined
FindingsFindings Importance of SE in producing unique
socio-economic outcomes Comparative strength of those outcomes
when united movement exists Movement of SE into policy and discourse
mainstream where united movements exist
Importance of intra-sectoral collaboration to building effective infrastructure, inputs and outputs
FindingsFindings
“the level of development that the sector achieves is directly correlated to the nature of the supportive environment, the strength of the sector infrastructure, and government commitment toward enabling the development of this environment and infrastructure through policy, programming, and funding.” p. 35 from Adeler, 2009.
FindingsFindings
Major initiatives globally• Social Economy Europe• US White House Office of Social Innovation,
$50 m Fund, CED financing from Stimulus• UK Third Sector initiative• Latin American “Economia Solidaria”
initiatives• Asian Solidarity Economy Network, including
Social Enterprise initiative in China• African SE initiatives (Mali, Senegal, S. Africa)
International TrendsInternational Trends• Growing government recognition of role of SE
in socio-economic development• Cross government (horizontal and vertical)
policies to support the SE with legislative, regulatory and program measures
• Unified structures of the SE by stakeholders to advance common development and policy interests
• Promotion of role of SE in integrated solutions to inter-related social, economic and environmental issues
International TrendsInternational Trends
• Enabling measures for access to finance for SEs• Inclusion of SEs in SME program eligibility• Tax, charitable and regulatory recognition (e.g.
CICs UK, LC3s US)• Procurement advantages• Support for enterprise development• Support for role of SEs in sustainable
development, poverty reduction-social inclusion, community and regional development
CanadaCanada• Lagging behind other jurisdictions since
cancellation of Federal SE Initiative• Stimulus/economic action plans making little
use of SE/CED sector• Charitable and regulatory barriers• Major gaps in access to finances• Lack of recognition of SE in economic and
social policies• An invisible sector contributing more to GDP
and employment than e.g. mining or autos
Canada: IssuesCanada: Issues• Citizen engagement and support• Fragmentation• Knowledge gaps• Economic inefficiencies• Policy influence• Finance and development capacity• Common identity• Movement building as a common agenda
CanadaCanada
BUT• Growth in Social Enterprise and Coop
Development• Food sovereignty and fair trade movements• Provincial linkages to poverty reduction• Quebec and Manitoba govt. strategies• Tax credit and financial investment programs • Municipal strategies (Montreal, Edmonton)• Renewable energy initiatives (Ontario)
CanadaCanada
• Formal democratic network in Quebec (le chantier de l’economie sociale)
• CED Network with informal cross sector coalition in Manitoba
• Emerging networks in other regions (Nunavut, Atlantic Canada, Ontario)
• National and provincial cooperative development advances
• Provincial non profit social enterprise initiatives
Lessons for Our WorkLessons for Our Work
• Higher end advances linked to united movement of SE actors
• Key components in building that unity:• Building identity and self recognition based on shared values • Credible public face related to public interest (not self interest) – “valeurs ajoutees” • Purposeful inclusion of indigenous peoples, labour, social and environmental movements• Dialogue with governments on the outcomes that can be achieved, co-construction of policy
Lessons for Our WorkLessons for Our Work
• Key components in building that unity:• Democratic structure with networking opportunities• Stakeholder led learning and research functions• Democratically controlled finance and development (technical assistance) functions• Active market development activities (e.g. procurement)• Linkages to reform of state (e.g. social welfare, taxation) and private sector
RecommendationsRecommendations• National and Provincial Roundtables
• Communication/Engagement Strategy
• Space for Grass Roots Participation
• Stakeholder-led Research and Learning Initiatives
• Government Outreach and Policy Development
• Sector-owned Finance and Development Models
• Market Development Initiatives
More information on our
activities:
www.ccednet-rcdec.cawww.ccednet-rcdec.cawww.socialeconomyhub.www.socialeconomyhub.
caca