EUSES 2021: a European crossroads for social economy

EUSES 2021: a European crossroads for social economy

EUSES 2021: a European crossroads for social economy 

For two days, many stakeholders of the social economy came together online at the first European summit exclusively dedicated to this topic. More than 5,000 participants attended this pioneering event, broadcasted from the Rhine city of Mannheim. It was also an opportunity for many organisations to present their ambitious and innovative projects from all over the continent around workshops and keynotes.

The Social Good Accelerator was one of them, notably to introduce its new projects.

mannheim presentators
Hosts introducing the EUSES on May 27th 2021
Source: EUSES, Stadt Mannheim (screenshot)

The event had been expected for several months, but was postponed due to the health situation. The German Presidency of the EU Council chose to hold it in the city of Mannheim, which was entrusted with the organisation of this major summit.
Some important European personalities were invited to speak on this occasion, such as Mrs. Manon Aubry and Mr. Sven Giegold (members of the Parliamentary Intergroup on Social Economy), Mrs. Jeanne Barseghian (Mayor of Strasbourg), Mr. Thierry Breton (Commissioner for the Internal Market) and especially Mr. Nicolas Schmit (Commissioner for Employment and Social Rights). The summit gave the Commissioner the opportunity to present the roadmap of the first European action plan for the social economy.
Indeed, the European Commission launched an open consultation last month to prepare this roadmap, in which SOGA participated and detailed its proposals on the digital transition and on a more collaborative economy.

The association’s proposals were developed thanks to our partners, in particular Mr. Michel Bauwens, who made the honour of granting us an interview. These recommendations also helped the scientific committee to evolve their thoughts on what the next part of our research work should be.

A first conference entitled “Study on cooperation between the social and digital sectors
During a presentation given to the SOGA at the summit, Mr. Emmanuel Rivat (Agence Phare, France), who heads the committee, presented the work he has previously conducted for the association. He also detailed his hypotheses and avenues of research for this second chapter, which will focus on new models of the contributory economy in Europe. Mr. Nuno Comando (Casa do Impacto, Portugal) presented further work on bringing together the digital and social sectors to create added value. The opportunity was to take innovative examples launched by this Portuguese organisation to implement inclusive digital solutions.

Open data, no-code and social
The summit was the occasion for SOGA to launch its brand new tool, the Social Tech Atlas. This is an interactive mapping of more than 1000 European stakeholders that support social economy organisations in their digital transition, as well as organisations offering alternative open or peer-to-peer digital services.
This open-source tool was designed thanks to the help of our partners, who worked alongside us. Mr. Erwan Kezzar (>Contournement>, France) and Mr. Sander Van der Waal (Waag, NL) presented the interest of open-source for the social sector and their valuable work on the design of a mobile and web application for this Atlas. Mrs. Patricia de la Garza Revilla (Quiddity, France) detailed the interest and importance for an organisation to become a provider of open data, which would allow moving towards a more collaborative economy. Mr. Víctor Meseguer (Social Economy Europe, Spain) detailed the key role of his organisation’s work in building European policies related to the social economy and putting it on the agenda.

keynote Mannheim
Launching the Social Tech Atlas with the association’s partners
Source: EUSES, Stadt Mannheim, Social Good Accelerator (screenshot) 
euses OECD conference
Jeanne Bretécher and other European speakers at a EUSES conference organised by the EESC on May 27th 2021
Source: EUSES, Stadt Mannheim (screenshot)

The digital transition for limited profit companies
In the context of the Mannheim summit, another conference organised by the EESC provided an opportunity for the association’s president, Mrs. Jeanne Bretécher, to speak about what SOGA advocates for a better digital transition. In particular, she highlighted the problem of unequal access to public aid, the problem of cultural barriers to cross-sectoral cooperation, and the problem of the lack of skills among social economy stakeholders.

The opportunity was also taken to highlight the actions to be prioritised by national and European public authorities to facilitate the digital transition of enterprises along with a panel of speakers from Finland to Italy. This would ideally be done by setting up ideal conditions of cooperation for a collaborative and digital social economy. Secondly, the rise of the digital commons was highlighted and advocated to be put at the heart of the recovery plan. In a final point, the president of the association returned to the need to democratise digital acculturation and to increase the skills of the social economy.

Then, the president of the association returned to the tools, technologies and key conditions for promoting the digital transition of social organisations. In an inclusive approach, the Social Good Accelerator has chosen not to talk only about limited profit-making enterprises, but to broaden the scope of its action to all structures working for the common good.

Indeed, there is a plurality of existing configurations in the social economy. This pushes us to support and give fair access to funds related to the digital transition of the social economy, and not to confine them exclusively to classical SMEs. It seems important to ensure the digitalisation of products and services for all users in order to improve the overall performance of organisations. This is a real issue of resilience that public authorities must address, “through the unique breadth of their competences within their mandates”.

European flags
The main building of the European Commission in Brussels, Belgium
Image free of rights

Furthermore, the question of investment in digital social change stakeholders is crucial. These include those involved in digital education, digital employment and the re-skilling and refinement of equitable models. At present, without a strong alternative model to the US and China, addressing social issues seems like a pipe dream. This is all the more important in view of the growing inequality, which has been at its highest for decades in OECD countries. That is why the president of the association raised the three main aspects that we believe define digital transformation:

A real problem of access to resources allocated by public authorities
With nearly 100 million people volunteering in the EU, there is a problem of formulation and a lack of inclusiveness in the way public support is designed. Most institutional funders, both public and private, target projects before structural means and change management. Digital transformation requires structural investment in hardware, software and, above all, training – both for the staff and volunteers involved.

There is also a cultural problem, linked to the one of supply
The conclusions of the first chapter of our study conducted by our association were clear. The values of the social economy sometimes seem incompatible with those of the producers of products and services in the digital economy. There is therefore a very strong cultural barrier, coupled with a generational barrier. This is partly due to prejudices as well as a lack of clarity about the range of alternative products and services that are compatible with the values of the organisations (free, open, truly collaborative) and genuinely accessible to newcomers (such as the new “no code” market).

The existence of a lack of digital skills among social economy stakeholders
Although digital technology represents a real opportunity for Social Economy organisations, the orders or public budgets allocated to organisations in the sector were largely insufficient in relation to the challenges to be met. In the context of a recovery plan marked by the resilience of populations, these shortcomings have a direct impact on the audiences of these organisations.

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Panorama view of the city of Mannheim, Germany, from which the EUSES was broadcasted
Source: EUSES, Stadt Mannheim (screenshot)

The Mannheim Summit was a real success for the association, which was able to show the interest of a better digitalisation for the social economy sector. Many organisations were able to meet other ones, while presenting ambitious and innovative projects and having constructive debates. The Social Good Accelerator had the opportunity to do the same, notably to put its ideas on the European stage. By being exclusively online, this summit also showed the possibilities of resilience in the current context, which was underlined in the roadmap of the social economy action plan. See you in November to follow closely its final publication. 

Sources:

– Michel Bauwens, Vasilis Kostakis, Manifeste pour une véritable économie collaborative : vers une société des communs, Editions Charles Léopold Mayer, Paris, 2017, 112 pages

-Marieke Huysentruyt, How European Governments Can Help Spur Innovations for the Public Good, Stanford Social Innovation Review, Stanford, 2021

EUSES 2021: on our way to Mannheim !

EUSES 2021: on our way to Mannheim !

After its postponement, we are finally at the doorstep of this key summit for the social economy at European level. In the context of the German Council Presidency in 2020, the choice was made to hold the first European Social Economy Summit in Mannheim. In the end, the summit will be exclusively digital, and broadcast from the Rhineland city on 26 and 27 May, which does not detract from the importance of this pioneering event.

The first ever European Social Economy Summit will take place in Mannheim at the end of this month, focusing on collaboration, innovation and digitalisation. Organised by the German Presidency of the Council of the European Union of 2020, this summit will put the European Social Economy even more in the spotlight. The other presidencies that will follow Germany will be able to complete this agenda. This is currently the case with the Portuguese Presidency of the Council of the EU, which wishes to place the social economy at the heart of its action. France also intends to make digital technology “a priority” of its future Council presidency in the first half of next year (more info here in French).

The summit will be an opportunity to bring together many actors of the social economy from the EU. More than 80 meetings and 300 European organisations will be there to present their projects based on the triptych of innovation, collaboration and digitalisation. This is why the Social Good Accelerator has been invited. This occasion will allow the association to present two of its projects, which are being finalised or are about to be launched.

The Social Tech Atlas, a directory of digital and social economy actors in Europe

The ambition of this new open-source tool that the Social Good Accelerator will introduce in Mannheim will be to reference the stakeholders of social tech in Europe. Around 1000 of them will be referenced in this tool, and many more of them are supposed to come – as this map works on the basis of the willingness of the organisations who want to be referred within it. More info here.

Our research pillar, a keystone to shape our European actions

The second chapter of our research will soon be launched. It will be focused on a more macroeconomic approach than the first chapter, which was rather a comparison between European stakeholders in tech and social to understand their needs and expectations from these sectors. Our conference at the Mannheim summit will be the occasion to explain in details the conclusions of our first chapter, which will be an enlightment to understand why we chose to differ our approach for the incoming research project. More info here.

SOGA EU 2020 Press Release – New ambitions, new team and sponsorship of Axelle Lemaire

Paris-Brussels, 26 October 2020
 

On the occasion of its annual General Assembly and its autumn Board of Directors, the SOGA EU (Social Good Accelerator EU) reaffirms its ambitions in favour of the digital transition of general interest actors in Europe. In order to achieve them, the association is renewing its Board of Directors and its Bureau: Axelle Lemaire, former Secretary of State in charge of digital and innovation within the French government and director of Terra numerata, associated with the Roland Berger law firm, has become the association’s patron. Alongside Jeanne Bretécher, President of the movement and Nils Pedersen, Vice-President in charge of Research and Institutional Affairs, Sylvain Reymond becomes Vice-President in charge of Development and Partnerships and Laura Frantz becomes Treasurer.

 
Created in March 2018, the Social Good Accelerator is a European movement that currently brings together 33 associations and social enterprises as well as 35 committed citizens between Paris, Lisbon and Brussels to accelerate the technological transition of general interest organisations in Europe. An increasing number of these actors are committed within this movement to ensure that organisations of social economy and civil society are fully recognised as players in the European technological transition, highlighting the non-profit and solidarity-based digital culture, exploring the conditions for cooperation between the social economy and the technological sector and organising the influence of European Social and Solidarity Economy (SSE) organisations in Brussels.

 

New European ambitions

In only two and a half years of its existence, SOGA EU has managed to organise the first Social Innovation Village at the Web Summit in 2018 (Lisbon) with the support of the European Commission to promote alternative models from SSE in Europe to Tech actors. At the end of 2019 it published a first study on cooperation between social utility and tech actors in Europe. 
 
Last spring, the movement and its members were consulted by the European Commission on the Data and AI strategies. At the same time, it launches the SOGA EU Academy, a peer-to-peer digital acculturation webinar programme for SSE organisations. 
 
On the basis of this initial assessment and these major successes, the association will intensify its action in the coming months with :
 
A mapping of the European actors of the digital transition in the Social and Solidarity Economy
The second part of our research work on cooperation between SSE and Tech actors in Europe, which will consist in analysing the contributions of the European tech sector
Active participation in the definition of the digital transition section of the European Plan for the Social Economy, which will be unveiled in Mannheim in May 2021 by the European Commissioner for Employment Nicolas Schmit, advised by Nicolas Hazard (INCO).
 

A strengthened  Governance

To achieve these new ambitions, the SOGA EU is renewing and consolidating its governance in depth while ensuring that it is representative of the stakeholders. 
 
Six new directors have joined the structure and support its expertise: Aurélien Beaucamp, President of AIDES and CSR Director of Page Group France; Emma Ghariani, Director General of SCIC la MedNum; Laure Vicard, Director of Innovation of Emmaus France; Denis Pansu, Director of Programmes of the Fondation Internet Nouvelle Génération; and Laura Franz, DAF-DRH of ProBonoLab.
 
Alongside Jeanne Bretécher, President, and Nils Pedersen, Vice-President, Sylvain Reymond also becomes Vice-President of the movement. Lila Senta Loys becomes Secretary and Laura Frantz, Treasurer.







Axelle Lemaire, former Secretary of State for Digital (2014-2017), joins the association as Main Sponsor and intends to give a new dimension to the Movement:



About the Social Good Accelerator Europe

 
The Social Good Accelerator EU is a European movement that brings together 33 associations and social enterprises and 35 committed citizens between Paris, Lisbon and Brussels to accelerate the technological transition of public interest organisations in Europe. 
 
In order for general interest organisations to be fully recognised as actors of the European technological transition, we highlight the non-profit and solidarity-based digital culture, explore the conditions of cooperation between social economy and technology sector and organise the influence of SSE organisations in Brussels. 
 

Our legal entity members (2020)




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Contact presse

Jeanne Bretécher, Présidente

contact (a) socialgoodaccelerator.eu

 

COMMUNIQUE SOGA EU 2020 – Nouvelles ambitions, nouvelle équipe et marrainage d’Axelle Lemaire

Paris-Bruxelles, le 26 octobre 2020

A l’occasion de son Assemblée Générale annuelle et de son Conseil d’Administration de rentrée, le SOGA EU (Social Good Accelerator EU) réaffirme ses ambitions en faveur de la transition numérique des acteurs de l’intérêt général en Europe. Pour les atteindre, l’association renouvelle son Conseil d’Administration et son Bureau  : Axelle Lemaire, ancienne secrétaire d’Etat en charge du numérique et de l’innovation au sein du gouvernement français et directrice de Terra numerata, associée au Cabinet Roland Berger devient pour sa part marraine de l’association. Aux côtés de Jeanne Bretécher, Présidente du mouvement et Nils Pedersen, Vice-Président en charge de la Recherche et des affairs institutionnelles Sylvain Reymond devient Vice-président en charge du développement et des partenariats et Laura Frantz devient trésorière.

Créé en mars 2018, le Social Good Accelerator est un mouvement européen qui réunit à ce jour 33 associations et entreprises sociales ainsi 35 citoyens engagés entre Paris, Lisbonne et Bruxelles pour accélérer la transition technologique des organisations d’intérêt général en Europe. Ces acteurs sont de plus en plus nombreux à s’engager au sein de ce mouvement afin que les organisations d’intérêt général soient pleinement reconnues comme actrices de la transition technologique européenne, met en lumière la culture numérique à but non lucratif et solidaire, explore les conditions de coopération entre économie sociale et secteur technologique et organise l’influence des organisations de l’Économie Sociale et Solidaire (ESS) européenne à Bruxelles.

De nouvelles ambitions européennes


En seulement 2 ans et demi d’existence le SOGA EU est parvenu à organiser le premier village de l’´innovation sociale au Web Summit en 2018 (Lisbonne) avec le soutien de la commission européenne pour valoriser les modèles alternatifs issus de l’ESS en Europe auprès des acteurs de la Tech. Fin 2019 elle a publié une première étude sur les coopérations entres acteurs d’utilité sociale et acteurs tech en Europe. 

Au printemps dernier, le mouvement et ses membres sont consultés par la Commission européenne sur les stratégies Data et IA. En même temps, il lance la SOGA EU Academy, une programmation de webinaire d’acculturation numérique « pair à pair » pour les organisations de l’ESS. 

Forte de ce premier bilan et de ces grandes réussites, l’association intensifie son action dans les prochains mois avec :

  • Une cartographie des acteurs européens de la transition numérique dans l’Économie sociale et solidaire
  • Le deuxième volet de notre travail de recherche sur les coopérations entre acteurs de l’ESS et de la Tech en Europe, qui consistera à analyser les contributions du secteur tech européen
  • Une participation active à la définition du volet transition numérique du Plan européen pour l’Économie sociale qui sera dévoilé  Mannheim en mai 2021 par le Commissaire européen à l’emploi Nicolas Schmit, conseillé par Nicolas Hazard (INCO).

Une Gouvernance qui se renforce en conséquence


Pour atteindre ces nouvelles ambitions, le SOGA EU renouvelle et consolide sa gouvernance en profondeur tout en veillant à sa volonté de représentativité des acteurs. 

Six nouveaux administrateurs intègrent la structure et viennent appuyer son expertise  : Aurélien Beaucamp, Président de AIDES et Directeur RSE de Page Group France ; Emma Ghariani, Directrice générale de la SCIC la MedNum ; Laure Vicard, Directrice de l’innovation d’Emmaüs France ; Denis Pansu, Directeur des programmes de la Fondation Internet Nouvelle Génération; et Laura Franz, DAF-DRH de ProBonoLab.

Aux côtés de Jeanne Bretécher, Présidente, et de Nils Pedersen, Vice-Président, Sylvain Reymond devient également Vice-Président du mouvement. Lila Senta Loys en devient Secrétaire et Laura Frantz, Trésorière.











Axelle Lemaire, ancienne Secrétaire d’Etat au numérique (2014-2017), rejoint de son côté l’association en la qualité de Marraine et entend donner une nouvelle dimension au Mouvement : 





















A propos du Social Good Accelerator Europe


Le Social Good Accelerator EU est un mouvement européen qui réunit 33 associations et entreprises sociales ainsi 35 citoyens engagés entre Paris, Lisbonne et Bruxelles pour accélérer la transition technologique des organisations d’intérêt général en Europe. 

Pour que les organisations d’intérêt général soient pleinement reconnues comme actrices de la transition technologique européenne, nous mettons en lumière la culture numérique à but non lucratif et solidaire, nous explorons les conditions de coopération entre économie sociale et secteur technologique et organisons l’influence des organisations de l’ESS à Bruxelles. 

Nos membres personnes morales (2020)




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Contact presse

Jeanne Bretécher, Présidente

contact (a) socialgoodaccelerator.eu


Interview of the Sponsor of SOGA EU : Axelle Lemaire

Interview of the Sponsor of SOGA EU : Axelle Lemaire

Interview of the Sponsor of SOGA EU : Axelle Lemaire

As a great honor for the team and our European community, Axelle Lemaire has agreed to become the Sponsor of the Social Good Accelerator EU in september 2020. Former French Secretary of State for Digital, at the origin of the law for a committed digital Republic, she is a fervent advocate of digital inclusion and technical solutions for the social and solidarity economy. No one could have better represent what we are all standing for.

G7 leaders

Why is it important for you to commit to a technological transition of Social Economy organizations and the valorisation of the alternative technical models resulting from it, at the European level?
As a European activist, and former Secretary of State for Digital and Innovation in the French government, I am convinced that Brussels must play a leading role in driving a European technological model centered on a fair, inclusive and responsible societal and environmental transition.

And from this perspective, new technologies are capable of the worst as well as the best. The startup financing model, which is based on the gamble of very rapid growth through the injection of private financial capital according to closed governance models, may tend to overshadow other alternative, more accessible models.

When only the search for maximum profitability counts, social inequalities are often reinforced and the ecological footprint worsened. It is important that the digital sector welcomes all models of economic and social development and that there is room for everyone, and not just for the glittering fundraisers!

To face up to these challenges, players in the field of solidarity and environmental protection, who are often deeply rooted in their local area, are taking on a role that is both critical and underestimated. In fact, Social Economy organizations are key players in preserving societal balance and the expected pivot of the economic system’s functioning. Everywhere, these organizations efficiently carry out indispensable educational, social and environmental missions. They also transmit basic skills to the most vulnerable groups throughout the country. They maintain social cohesion by mobilizing citizens, professionals and experts to create communities, defend democracy and the collective heritage. All this is achieved through constant innovation, at all levels and all geographical scales, for example by hybridizing economic models or creating new services or new processes to serve solidarity and environmental transition.

In this respect, technological transition could enable social economy to increase its capacity for action, and to do so in its own way. A number of initiatives – and models from the non-profit or limited-profit sector – deserve to be better known and deployed on a massive scale. But social economy organizations, which should be pushed to do better, are increasingly forced to do less: they find themselves in a “unthinkable” situation in terms of support for the digital transition of organizations, since neither institutional donors nor patrons are funding the skills development and support needed for these changes in methods of thinking, working and acting in the field to the level of the reality of the needs. It is time to help social economy organizations go to scale through digital technology.

Why did you agree to be a sponsor of SOGA EU?

The Social Good Accelerator is a young association that wants to contribute to bring this subject of the technological transition of the SSE to Brussels, to create a European community of action and sharing as well as bridges between the worlds of solidarity and technology. These are more than useful but very ambitious projects, led by a new generation of professionals in the social and solidarity economy and digital activists.

The cause is just, and I feel completely in line with SOGA’s founding vision. This type of initiative requires mobilizations of all kinds: federating the organizations concerned, recruiting experts and volunteers, raising funds, conducting research and bringing sectoral demands to fruition.

“I am convinced that Brussels must play a leading role in driving a European technological model centered on a fair, inclusive and responsible societal and environmental transition.”

Axelle Lemaire, former French Secretary of State for digital affairs, Sponsor of SOGA EU (2014-2017)

How will you concretely engage with our members?
Sponsor, it’s a nice role! I will bring a benevolent and protective look and support to the activities of the Social Good Accelerator.At my level, I am happy to be able to contribute to support the association through my experience, to make it known and to serve as a springboard. I can also be consulted on one of my fields of expertise and facilitate dialogue with a number of decision-makers, or support courageous positions when necessary.

mannheim stadt