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Title: Geoff Mulgan


1
Social reform in changing times Adelaide, April
2007
Geoff Mulgan
2
How does innovation happen? Where do innovations
come from? How do they grow? Whose job is it?
3
  • Self-build housing
  • Congestion charging
  • Magazines sold by the homeless
  • Resilience programmes for young people
  • Neighbourhood wardens
  • Integrated childcare
  • Wikipedia and Ohmynews
  • Complementary medicine and hospices
  • Micro-credit and consumer cooperatives
  • Fair trade
  • Zero carbon housing schemes and community wind
    farms
  • Land trusts
  • Patient led health schemes
  • Carbon credits and trading
  • Restorative justice and community courts
  • Timebanks and Pledgebanks
  • . c

4
Collective intelligence (CI)
  • Familiar ideas of IQ, multiple intelligences, EQ,
    social intelligence
  • My interest societies capacities to think,
    decide, achieve their most important common goals
  • Contributions of many sub-systems politics,
    business and markets, media, academia, civil
    society
  • Observing, measuring, scanning, theorising,
    adapting, designing, shaping, learning, arguing,
    negotiating, recombining

5
CI depends on
  • Human capital (though not enough USSR as
    example)
  • Social capital and ability to cooperate
  • Organisational capacities
  • Network structures and linkages internal and
    external
  • Systems that reward improvement, new ideas that
    work

6
But
  • Always a large gap between potential and
    achievement in any society
  • Blockages, weak capacities make societies slow to
    adapt, recognise needs
  • Some crucial parts can dumb down (media?
    politics?)
  • Even the best are optimised for themselves not
    for wider society
  • Particular weaknesses in linkages, systemic,
    holistic

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  • Childhood in Australia and regular visitor to
    Adelaide
  • policy-maker, futurologist, writer on
    meritocracy, family, old age
  • creator of over 60 organisations all embodying a
    radical vision of social change, from patient-
    led health to post-chronologism

9
  • straddled many systems
  • insider and outsider
  • always taking no as a question
  • small changes with potentially big leverage
  • just do it!

10
www.youngfoundation.org
11
Politics driving change responding to threats,
opportunities, public demands and bureaucrats
promoting new ideas
12
Cheongyecheon in Seoul, South Korea
13
Academics knowledge transfer into society
14
Business .
15
Individuals catalyse
16
One person with a belief is equal to a force of
99 who only have interests John Stuart Mill
17
but usually as part of broader movements
18
Its amazing what you can achieve if you dont
care who gets the credit Harry Truman
19
Change starts on the edges but then moves to
the centreStarts as informal, inchoate
becomes formalised, routines, manuals
20
Alliances between Bees small groups,
individuals with insight and ideas
Trees big organisations (governments, companies,
foundations) with power and money
21
Work and family
  • Shift of women into workplace equivalent to shift
    from rural to industrial in late 19th that gave
    rise to all modern labour relations rules
  • Accumulating responses in personal life, civic,
    business, academic, policy, legislative responses
    still in motion but dependent on activists
    finding levers in big employers, parliaments

22
Health
  • Eradication of smallpox, combination of science,
    state programmes, very localised innovations
  • Shift from acute to chronic disease as core of
    health system, again with personal, civic,
    intellectual, policy shifts sometimes in tension
    sometimes reinforcing each other

23
Whats the problem? Change too slow, erratic,
blocked, frustrated
24
  • Climate change
  • Poverty
  • Rapid urbanisation
  • Ageing and isolation
  • Diversity and conflict
  • Chronic disease and disability

25
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
Index of sustainable economic welfare (ISEW)
Happiness
Time
1950s 60s 70s 80s
90s 00s
26
Strong systems for technological innovation, weak
systems for social innovation
27
What can accelerate social innovation and
adaptation? What can amplify collective
intelligence?
28
  • Government and public sector
  • Academia
  • Business
  • Civil society
  • Active public

29
evidence performance management measurement analys
is testing, piloting, continuous learning policy
adaptation
public and user feedback choice engagement politic
al argument
30
  • Strategic success also depends on innovation
    50-80 in economy
  • In technology and science funding systems,
    committees, prizes, large proportions of GDP
  • But far less for social and public innovation
    ad hoc, random, no-ones job, impeded by silos

31
  • For the public sector
  • Finance for innovation and social RD
  • More open source innovation systems health as
    exemplar
  • Experiments, laboratories, learning networks,
    zones
  • Empowered citizens
  • Public sectors that cultivate their hinterlands
    porous to new ideas, providing markets for
    outcomes
  • More open styles openness as the default
  • Public data made available for matching, mining,
    mashing

32
Role of open knowledge in politics,
government Role of challenge from outside in
renewal
33
  • For civil society
  • New ways of mapping changing needs
  • Wider range of responses from campaigns to
    social enterprise to partnerships
  • New forms of finance for innovations
  • Incubation and taking seriously role as
    discovery mechanism
  • Full use of global networks

34
COPYING, SCALING, REPLICATION, DIFFUSION, GROWTH,
TAKE-OFF
favourable environments, effective demand -
ideas models licensing franchising
takeovers organic growth
boundedness of the idea (what, who, how, where)
35
  • For universities
  • New approaches to knowledge transfer and
    adaptation beyond the linear model
  • Embedded academics working in teams
  • Collaboratives linking policy makers, front line,
    users, academics on problem solving
  • Intelligence on live issues
  • Integrating tacit knowledge in fields like
    chronic disease

36
  • For business
  • Opening up capacities for social challenges
  • Learning service innovation
  • User-driven innovation
  • Open source methods
  • Preparing for economy where the biggest sectors
    are health, education, care

37
Active publics
  • People as competent interpreters of their own
    lives
  • The missing element in many innovation strategies

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Ensuring flows of new ideas every field needs
to know its pipeline
43
Ensuring capacity to cope with learning

44
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45
The barriers to collective intelligence
  • Subsystems optimised eg academia with research
    quality, politics focused on swing voters,
    business on quarterly returns but not good at
    systems
  • Lack of metrics for collective intelligence - yet
    critical to success of cities, regions, societies
  • Underdeveloped methods and processes for
    organising in holistic ways, fully exploiting
    public intelligence, experience
  • Need to cultivate new habits and cultures

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47
Who helps who in a town or city
48
Housing
Close-up of Housing
Global View of the Local Strategic Partnership
Finding Karen Scott vital when innovation in
housing is needed
49
Collaborators
Fire Tom Hiskins
NRFJean Bennett
NMTPaul Sutcliffe
Marti Lean
50
  • Reveals the underlying structure of knowledge and
    learning in a field
  • Who makes collaboration work
  • Issues of retention and succession
  • How some organisations better connectors/collabora
    tors than others
  • Combined with effective intelligence and
    similar methods to reveal dynamics of
    collaboration

51
Government Effectiveness
52
  • The Future?
  • Before 1900 scientific and technological
    innovation relied on energetic individuals
  • Then became organised, structured,
    professionalised with substantial private and
    public investment
  • Social innovation starting a parallel transition
  • Developing a similar range of institutions
    finance, scaling methods, linking individuals,
    teams and networks for collective intelligence

53
Every truth passes through three phases. First
it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed.
Third, it is accepted as being self-evident Scho
penhauer
54
South Australia?
  • SA has many of the elements in place to be a
    showcase of collective intelligence
  • Traditions of creativity and innovation
  • Thinking capacity in University city
  • Scale to act quickly, ethos of seeing world as a
    toolkit
  • Gandhi live like you expect to die tomorrow but
    learn like you expect to live forever

55
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