Frontiers in Forests and Global Change (Aug 2022)

Discourses on social innovation and abandoned land reutilization pathways. A case study on riverside landscapes in a mountain area of Spain

  • Alexia Sanz-Hernández,
  • Alexia Sanz-Hernández,
  • Paula Jiménez-Caballero,
  • Lázaro M. Bacallao-Pino,
  • Raquel Salvador Esteban,
  • Raquel Salvador Esteban,
  • María Martín-Santafé,
  • María Martín-Santafé

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/ffgc.2022.921649
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

Read online

The article aims to analyze, based on a multiple case study, the discourses of the individuals that promote social innovation (SI) initiatives for the reuse of abandoned riverside landscapes, connecting SI theory with land reutilization and management through discourse analysis. Following a qualitative methodology, the text analyses the characteristics of the promoting actors, the discourses storylines and the main actors’ discourses, describing some relevant aspects regarding SI, such as why, where and when it takes place; how it has been developed; who has promoted it; its main results, as well as the barriers faced for its development and future opportunities for the territory. Two main discursive tendencies are identified: a negationist trend and a possibilistic one, adopted by individuals who are not promoting initiatives of SI and by promoters of these kinds of experiences, respectively. Possibilistic discourse underlines the coherent articulation between the economic-managerial dimension and the emotional-territorial one, and there is, in this case, a tendency to change in the visions of the territory, reconfiguring the social practices of the actors involved in these initiatives of SI. We conclude that discourses behind successful processes of SI are associated with certain positions on the interrelationships between individual- collective-institutionality-nature and that there is a complex articulation between discourses on SI and social practices developed by individuals as part of these initiatives, in such a reflexive way that discourses advance the desired changes, drawing and modifying the future vision of the subjects, and making the impossible possible.

Keywords