Westley & Antadze (2010) – Social innovation as complex system change

Westley & Antadze (2010)

Social innovation as a complex system change

The approach advocated by Westley and Antadze (2010) interprets social innovation through the dynamics of complex adaptive systems. The authors use systems science and social theory to describe how a new solution — for example, a local community experiment — can become a catalyst for systemic change in the long term.

According to this way of thinking, social innovation is not a linear but an emergent process: small-scale initiatives and experiments transform social structures through self-organization and feedback over time.

The authors describe the process as a “scaling deep” phenomenon: not only the quantitative spread of innovations (scaling out), but also their qualitative embedding — at the level of values, beliefs, and institutional practices — is crucial.

The theory has also had a great influence on resilience-based approaches to social innovation. According to Westley and Antadze, true systemic change requires a multi-level network of connections that connect individual initiatives, community learning, and policy-institutional decision-making.
This approach has been adopted by the OECD, EU, and UN innovation guidelines as one of the foundations of the “systemic social innovation” paradigm.