| Ash cloud lessons on social enterprise in the UK |
| Opinion |
| by Tim Draimin |
| on May 27, 2010 |
|
I was very fortunate in April to have learned a lot about the UK’s experience when I travelled there to attend the 2010 Skoll World Forum. The forum coincided with the start of the UK election and, as it turned out, I was trapped in the UK for a second week due to the Icelandic ash cloud. Like my prolific UK-reporting colleagues Robin Cory and Al Etmanski, I had an unanticipated, intensive and policy-rich exposure to the UK scene. A key benefit was connecting to UK social enterprise leader Ben Metz, who has just finished mapping the UK’s social economy. His report is a highly useful introduction and overview explicitly geared to facilitate outsiders drawing lessons. As Ben said in his recent Guardian blog, he wants to ensure people don’t get an “airbrushed account” of the UK experience. Several pertinent impressions emerged for me:
Ben Metz is wise to admonish those of us outside the UK to critically evaluate the UK experience. But my big UK take-away is that if Canada’s social enterprise movement is to hit its stride, our practitioners have to step up their policy work. And that is the big opportunity of next week’s National Summit on a People-Centred Economy. I hope to see you there! Tim Draimin is the executive director of Social Innovation Generation (SiG) and Chair of CAUSEWAY. |




Canada has a rich history of social enterprise, especially seen through the lens of Quebec’s social economy or the broader community economic development movement. Less well developed is a nationally scaled social enterprise and social finance movement, which has not had the benefit of supportive and comprehensive national public policy. In that sense, Canada trails behind other jurisdictions like the United States or the United Kingdom.