Front cover image for New strategies for social innovation : market-based approaches for assisting the poor

New strategies for social innovation : market-based approaches for assisting the poor

Steven G. Anderson (Author)
"Market-based development strategies designed to help the world's poor receive significant support from advocates, academics, governments, and the media, yet frequently the perceived success of these programs rests on carefully selected examples and one-sided, enthusiastic accounts. In practice, these approaches are often poorly defined and executed, with little balanced, comparative analysis of their true strengths and weaknesses. This book is the first to assess emerging market-based social change approaches comparatively, focusing specifically on social entrepreneurship, corporate social responsibility, fair trade, and private sustainable development. Steven G. Anderson begins by identifying the problems these programs address and then describes their core, shared principles. He follows with a general framework for defining and evaluating these and other development approaches. Separate chapters provide background on the historical development and application of each approach, as well as interpretations of the processes for implementation and the underlying behavioral assumptions related to successful outcomes. A final chapter compares each approach across a set of important program development dimensions and analyzes the utility of market-based approaches as part of a general consideration of social development strategies for the developing world."--Publisher's description
Print Book, English, 2014
Columbia University Press, New York, 2014
ix, 329 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780231159227, 9780231159234, 0231159226, 0231159234
875884411
Introduction to market-oriented social development approaches
Developing social change models
Corporate social responsibility
Social entrepreneurship
Private sustainable development
Fair trade
Market-based social change models : reflections on strengths, limitations, and directions for social change advocates