The Reading Bud

Book Blog by Heena Rathore-Pardeshi

Book Review: Empowerment within (Social) Innovation by Knut-Erland Berglund

Review

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Empowerment within (Social) Innovation by Knut-Erland Berglund is a rigorous and socially engaged study of how innovation can be understood beyond the familiar language of technology, commercial products, and male-dominated industries. Drawing together research on social innovation, empowerment, gender equality, organisational change, and participatory inquiry, author Berglund argues for a more inclusive model that recognises innovation occurring within communities, nonprofit organisations, creative sectors, public institutions, and groups traditionally overlooked by mainstream innovation policy.

At the centre of the book are three Swedish organisations (Winnet, Magma, and Leia) whose activities are examined across individual, organisational, and societal levels. Author Berglund considers how these organisations create new services, methods, organisational structures, meeting spaces, and ways of articulating social needs. Their work demonstrates that innovation need not result in a patentable product to be significant. It may instead take the form of greater access to resources, stronger professional networks, increased visibility, new language through which inequality can be understood, or enhanced opportunities for women to participate in entrepreneurship and regional development.

This broader definition of innovation is the book’s most valuable contribution. Author Berglund effectively challenges the assumption that innovation is politically or culturally neutral. What societies choose to recognise, finance, measure, and celebrate as “innovative” is shaped by existing values and hierarchies. When technical products and traditionally masculine industries dominate the conversation, innovations emerging from care work, community organising, service sectors, cultural activity, and gender-equality initiatives are easily rendered invisible. The book therefore treats inclusion not merely as an ethical supplement to innovation, but as a condition for discovering a wider range of ideas and solutions.

The concept of empowerment gives this argument additional depth. Author Berglund does not reduce empowerment to personal confidence or individual motivation. Instead, he presents it as a relational process shaped by access to knowledge, networks, decision-making, status, and material resources. This is important because marginalisation cannot be overcome solely by asking individuals to become more enterprising. Organisational practices and wider social structures must also change. The book’s movement between the micro, meso, and macro levels allows it to show how personal agency, institutional reform, and social transformation remain interconnected.

The book is strongest when its theoretical discussion remains closely connected to the organisations’ practical work. The empirical chapters illustrate how creative meeting places, support networks, knowledge-sharing, entrepreneurship programmes, and advocacy can operate as socially innovative interventions. These examples prevent “social innovation” and “empowerment” from becoming entirely abstract concepts and demonstrate how relatively local initiatives may exert influence across multiple levels.

However, this is a demanding academic text. Its literature review is extensive, the conceptual vocabulary is specialised, and several ideas recur across the theoretical, empirical, analytical, and concluding chapters. Greater compression could have strengthened the argument and made the central framework easier to retain. Readers unfamiliar with innovation studies, gender theory, participatory research, or institutional analysis may also require time to absorb the terminology.

The English edition occasionally contains awkward constructions and phrasing that appear to have carried over from translation. These do not undermine the study’s underlying ideas, but they can interrupt the flow and occasionally obscure otherwise important distinctions. A more thorough language edit, along with clearer tables or visual summaries of the micro–meso–macro framework and the identified innovation strategies, would have made the work significantly more accessible.

Overall, Empowerment within (Social) Innovation is a thoughtful and substantial contribution to conversations about innovation, gender equality, power, and social change. Its central argument is both timely and convincing: innovation flourishes most fully when a greater diversity of people is able to define problems, propose solutions, access resources, and participate in shaping society. It will be particularly valuable to researchers, policymakers, nonprofit leaders, regional-development professionals, gender-equality practitioners, and readers interested in participatory approaches to institutional change.


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I’m Heena

Welcome to The Reading Bud, my cosy corner of the internet dedicated to all things books and authors. Here, I invite you to join me on a journey of discovering under-represented books, independent and small press authors, and all things book with a touch of love and loud purrs. Let’s get Reading!

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