2016
DOI: 10.5751/es-08718-210407
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Innovating at the margins: the System of Rice Intensification in India and transformative social innovation

Abstract: ABSTRACT. I explore transformative social innovation in agriculture through a particular case of agroecological innovation, the System of Rice Intensification (SRI) in India. Insights from social innovation theory that emphasize the roles of social movements and the reengagement of vulnerable populations in societal transformation can help reinstate the missing "social" dimension in current discourses on innovation in India. India has a rich and vibrant tradition of social innovation wherein vulnerable communi… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…(Avelino et al 2014b:6). Several authors follow this conceptualization of game-changers in their respective articles and subsequently focus on discussing empirical phenomena under study (Campos et al 2016, Prasad 2016, Cipolla et al 2017, Gordon et al 2017. Others propose alternative concepts to both clarify and broaden our conceptualization of game-changers.…”
Section: Conceptualizing Game-changers In Transformative Social Innovmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…(Avelino et al 2014b:6). Several authors follow this conceptualization of game-changers in their respective articles and subsequently focus on discussing empirical phenomena under study (Campos et al 2016, Prasad 2016, Cipolla et al 2017, Gordon et al 2017. Others propose alternative concepts to both clarify and broaden our conceptualization of game-changers.…”
Section: Conceptualizing Game-changers In Transformative Social Innovmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A mixture of all three, can be found in Prasad's (2016) perception of an agricultural crisis as manifested through farmer suicides, productivity increases with stagnating or declining farm incomes, high dependence on external inputs (such as subsidized fertilizers, irrigation based on high extractions of poor quality groundwater), increasing indebtedness, deskilling, drought, and soil deterioration in India. Globally, this agricultural crisis shows through a high and everincreasing ecological footprint, application of synthetic fertilizers as the fastest growing source of greenhouse gas emissions, extractive use of water, and land degrading practices.…”
Section: (Economic) Crisesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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