Abstract

The United Nations Agenda 2030 has recognized that Social Economy (SE) entities play an important role in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). In order to maximize the impact of the SE, governments have recently deployed new policies regarding these entities. The objective is to understand the context of policy change that has allowed these policies to emerge, their main characteristics and the critical factors in their construction and implementation. Successful policy cases in Europe and Spain have been studied. Qualitative data have been collected through key policy documents, experts, and focus groups. As a main finding, the study shows that this new model of policies exhibits the following features: it focuses on transformative change, follows the public-community partnership governance approach and the mainstream approach in the sense of a broader policy context, and finally, it is innovative in terms of means and of complex systematization of strategies. Difficulties in the implementation of the partnership approach, in the deployment of the policy-mainstreaming approach, and in the acceptance of the SE framed by all policymakers, SE representatives, and government staff, and constraints in financial endowment are the main critical factors in the implementation of these policies.

Highlights

  • Cooperatives, as well as civil society organizations and philanthropic organizations, all of them entities that make up the Social Economy [1], play a major role in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) of the UN 2030 Agenda, as is stated in the Resolution (A/RES/70/1) of the United Nations General Assembly Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development [2]

  • A major change occurred during the last decade: A new generation of public policies has spread in Europe and around the world [8,12,52]

  • The second generation of Social Economy policies aims to radically increase social participation. This is done in two areas: on the one hand, to increase the involvement of existing social actors in the process of policy design and implementation; and on the other, to generically expand social participation aimed at social transformation, i.e., to broaden the range of people, groups, and entities that can be involved in the political project of social transformation that is Social Economy policy

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Summary

Introduction

Cooperatives, as well as civil society organizations and philanthropic organizations, all of them entities that make up the Social Economy [1], play a major role in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) of the UN 2030 Agenda, as is stated in the Resolution (A/RES/70/1) of the United Nations General Assembly Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development [2].

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