Information and Communication Technologies and Social Innovation: A
Structured Literature Review
Anindo Saka Fitri
1
and Mahendrawathi
1
1
Information Systems Department, Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember, Surabaya, Indonesia
Keywords:
Strategy, Social Innovation, ICT, Information Technology, Society.
Abstract:
Every company must try to innovate to survive in the global competition. Company can initiate business inno-
vation that is socially oriented or often called as social innovation. Social innovation arises when technology
innovation benefits the social community. Many authors identify Information and Communication Technolo-
gies (ICT) as one of the drivers for social innovations. The purpose of this study is to define social innovation
and identify the type of ICT that most frequently drive social innovation. A structured literature review was
conducted to achieve the objective. Literatures are obtained from two online databases namely Science Direct
and Emerald Insight. The searching process results are 45 papers on Science Direct and 17 papers on Emerald
Insight. After conducting exclusion inclusion mechanism, 16 papers are used for further analysis. From these
literatures, definition of social innovation is determined. It was also found that mobile application is the most
often used ICT in driving social innovation. The result is expected to provide a reference in conducting future
research on social innovation.
1 INTRODUCTION
Companies in the business today must innovate to
survive the increasingly fierce business competition.
The company can start to do business innovation that
is socially oriented or often called as social innova-
tion. More and more business people are trying to
understand their business models that are helped by
Social Innovation (Davies, 2014). Social innovation
is viewed as stemming from a new combination of
ideas that had previously been separate. Social inno-
vations are achieved through reconfiguration of col-
lective, intentional and goaloriented actions of social
entrepreneurs (Cui et al., 2017). Social innovation
refers to the results expected from the technology in-
novation for the social community benefits (Mulgan,
2010). Despite several publications mentioning social
innovation, the definition of social innovation is still
ambiguous. This prevent the development of general-
izable knowledge of Social innovation (Van der Have
and Rubalcaba, 2016).
Recent development of Information and Commu-
nication Technologies (ICT) helps accelerate the so-
cial innovation (Cui et al., 2017). Nowadays, ICT
is needed to help in managing the environment and
reduce the poverty level in a country by supporting
marginalised people with appropriate access to infor-
mation, education, health, as well as financial services
(Ashraf and Malik, 2011); (Cecchini and Scott, 2003)
(Thatchenkery et al., 2004). There must be actors
such as local government who repairs the condition
so that the local businesses prosper. But in the social
innovation with ICT, there are individuals motivated
by the spiritual religion, guilty feeling, affection and
etc., to develop their communities (Sandeep and Rav-
ishankar, 2015). These individuals can be described
as social entrepreneurs. They play important roles in
creating condition and managing the process that al-
lows the local businesses to develop and help the area
out of poverty. Therefore, it is important to investigate
the mechanisms underlying ICT that enable social in-
novation. So, social entrepreneurs get profits for the
company and at the same time for the social environ-
ment.
According to the expert, ICT persistently creating
new types of markets that enabled new patterns of in-
dustry dynamics (Lee et al., 2015). (Yunus, 1998)
predicts that poor people throughout the world are ca-
pable and ready to use technology, and eventually this
will alleviate poverty. Therefore, it can be said that
technology can be one of the tools for social develop-
ment.
The problem that became the main focus of this
journal review was defining social innovation and ob-
130
Fitri, A. and Mahendrawathi, .
Information and Communication Technologies and Social Innovation: A Structured Literature Review.
DOI: 10.5220/0009906701300135
In Proceedings of the International Conferences on Information System and Technology (CONRIST 2019), pages 130-135
ISBN: 978-989-758-453-4
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
taining what types of ICT that was implemented to
develop social innovation. The results are expected to
provide a reference for further related studies in social
innovation through ICT implementation.
2 METHODS
This stage explained the methodology stages done by
the authors in this paper review. A systematic review
was undertaken using Kitchenham steps (Kitchen-
ham, 2007). First step is determining the topic and
the research questions. This is followed by search
of literature. The literature are filtered based on cer-
tain inclusion and exclusion criteria. The results are
assessed further following certain assessment proce-
dure. The final step is reporting the result of the re-
view.
2.1 Determining the Topic
In this stage, author looked for the topic that is impor-
tant to be the research material. This research related
to the topic in the enterprise system, therefore authors
tried to find the problem related to the topic. Authors
were interested to discuss about social innovation in
business that is influenced by the use of ICT. The de-
termination of social innovation can be used various
methods. Therefore, author wanted to find the most
used method and was suitable to determine the social
innovation with literature review.
2.2 Determining the Research
Questions
Two research questions are arranged as a guide for
conducting mapping studies and identifying research
opportunities. Based on the previous explanation, the
following were the research questions proposed by
this paper:
RQ1: What is the definition of social innovation?
RQ2: What types of ICT are used for social innova-
tion?
2.3 Collecting the Paper
The process of collecting papers for this paper review
was based on the popular paper search engine that
are Science Direct (sciencedirect.com) and Emerald
Insight (emeraldinsight.com). The limitation of the
papers was these papers were able to be downloaded
in the scope of Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember
(ITS), that means these papers were open access to
academic community of ITS.
2.4 Paper Selection
Paper selection steps are intended to select and iden-
tify primary studies that provide direct evidence about
the research question. From the sources for collecting
papers, authors do the selection process based on sev-
eral stages, as follows:
2.4.1 Keyword Selection
Keywords used in the paper finding in each source
engine were “Social Innovation” AND ”Informa-
tion and Communication Technologies” AND ”Com-
puter” OR ”Social Innovation” AND ”Information
and Communication Technologies” AND ”Mobile”,
because this paper review discussed a topic about
ICT (computer/mobile) for social innovation. Au-
thors have matched the keywords with this paper’s
objectives.
2.4.2 Inclusion Exclusion Selection
The several inclusion and exclusion used to select the
paper before the research was conducted. Inclusion
criteria were: written in English; papers published in
between 2014-2018; papers match the keyword insert
on Science Direct and Emerald Insight. Therefore,
exclusion criteria were: no theory books; no textbook;
papers that were not focused on Social Innovation; pa-
per that not focus on ICT and its application on Social
Innovation.
2.5 Content Selection (Weighting)
The quality of papers evaluated based on inclusion
and exclusion criteria. The assessment procedure is
based on value associated with scores: Agree/Match
= 3, Part Agree/Part Match = 2, Disagree/Not Match
= 1, Not Related = 0. This weighting based on advice
from Likert (Djaali, 2008). Based on the proposed re-
search question, the following Figure 1 refers to some
assessment used on the highest, which was 3 points.
Figure 1: RQ-based assessment.
Information and Communication Technologies and Social Innovation: A Structured Literature Review
131
3 RESULTS
In relation to the stages discussed on the methodology
chapter, this chapter points out on the results obtained
from each stage.
3.1 The Result of Paper Collection
By using the keyword explained on the methodol-
ogy chapter, 2 searches were done on 2 main sources,
(Science Direct and Emerald Insight). After doing the
inclusion and exclusion, 75 results were found on Sci-
ence Direct and 17 results were on Emerald Insight,
as it can be seen on Table 2 as follows. Then, the ti-
tle an the author of the paper founded can be seen on
Figure 3.
Figure 2: The result of paper collection.
Figure 3: Papers founded.
space
Figure 4: Papers founded(Cont.).
3.2 Papers Selection
The first selection was carried out through skimming
on title, abstract, introduction, literature review and
conclusion, in which there was no discussion found
related to social innovation, so that the paper be-
longed to exclusion. By doing that selection, 16 pa-
pers of 75 Science Direct journals and 17 Emerald
Insight journals were obtained (14 Science Direct pa-
pers and 2 Emerald Insight papers) which come un-
der the criteria and then were assessed on Figure 1.
Through the use of assessment which was appropri-
ate with RQ explained on methodology, the following
Figure 3 is defined as the assessment result of the ob-
tained papers.
CONRIST 2019 - International Conferences on Information System and Technology
132
space
Figure 5: Assessment.
Source of Figure 1 : [1] (Davies, 2014) , [2] (Cui
et al., 2017), [3] (Mulgan, 2010), [4] (Van der Have
and Rubalcaba, 2016), [5] (Ashraf and Malik, 2011),
[6] (Cecchini and Scott, 2003), [7] (Thatchenkery
et al., 2004), [8] (Sandeep and Ravishankar, 2015),
[9] (Lee et al., 2015), [10] (Yunus, 1998), [11]
(Kitchenham and Charters, 2007), [12] (Djaali, 2008),
[13] (Wu et al., 2018), [14] (Rahman et al., 2017),
[15] (Wehn and Evers, 2015) , [16] (Shin and Kim,
2018).
According to Figure 5, the papers whose value
was high were paper [1], [2], [3], [4], [15] with 6 as
its values. It was assumed that these papers answered
RQ1 and RQ2. That means those papers contain the
definition of social innovation from expert. Morover,
those papers stated the type of ICT that they used and
also the case study clearly. Meanwhile, paper [10] had
the lowest value, which was 1. This journal only be
able to answer RQ2. That means, paper [10] doesn’t
mention the definition of social innovation from the
expert. Beside that, the case study and the type of
ICT used in that paper research was not clear.
3.3 The Definition of Social Innovation
There were a lot of perspectives in understanding the
definition of social innovation. Various definitions
proposed by the researcher in this review journal were
compared on Figure 6 below.
space
Figure 6: The definition of social innovation.
From Figure 6 the researchers emphasize social
aspects. Some researchers perceived social innova-
tion as a concept that can provide solutions to prob-
lems in society. However, there are two important
characteristics of social innovation: first, the novelty
and effectiveness of ideas when implemented and sec-
ond, their orientation towards solving social problems
that produce mutual benefits rather than individuals.
The researchers say that social innovation also trig-
gers social change (Wehn and Evers, 2015). Social
innovation creates new relationships and systems of
government that can empower new actors. Social in-
novation can also generate new ways to collaborate
and participate, reduce and integrate the traditional
roles of producers, buyers and users. In all cases,
social innovation can strengthen new capabilities
for each actor and optimize current resources for
the future. From the explanation above, authors
concluded that social innovation is innovation that
aims to provide solutions to the main challenges
faced by the community and, in parallel, improve
the capacity of the community and other actors in
creating new services and products that benefit not
only business but also improve the quality of life of
the community.
3.4 Type of ICT Used for Social
Innovation
The type of ICT used for social innovation in each
journal is described in Figure 6. In addition, the name
of the system is also mentioned and where the re-
search of case studies of each paper was analyzed.
Information and Communication Technologies and Social Innovation: A Structured Literature Review
133
space
Figure 7: Type of ICT with the application of social inno-
vation.
From Figure 7, the type of ICT that was mostly
used as social innovation in the founded journal was
mobile application. It was because the application
form mobile was in a rapid development. Beside the
use in business, mobile application also used to de-
velop society and region. There were 5 papers men-
tioned about mobile application that could be imple-
mented for social innovation. It was added with a pa-
per which mentioned the usage of all types of ICT
which meant they also use mobile application. As in
paper [1], it mentioned that ICT in the form of mobile
application integrated with provider and government
to develop transportation to people with special needs.
In paper [9], it also mentioned about mobile payment
in some banks in Brazil that could help payment in
which useful for the state’s economic development.
Therefore, based on the reviewed journal, it could be
concluded that the types of ICT in the form of mobile
application was the most often used by social innova-
tion.
4 DISCUSSION
Social innovation could not be separated from the pro-
cess of company business. From the result of the
definition of social innovation discussed previously,
social innovation plays in creating service and new
product which is beneficial not only in terms of busi-
ness but also improve the life quality of the people.
Therefore, with a good business management pro-
cess, a company also could create social innovation
that was beneficial for the company itself. Business
management itself is also related to the company’s
strategy. The company’s strategy is in the form of
long-term plans done by the company, while business
processes are activities that are measurable and struc-
tured to produce certain outputs (Davenport, 1993).
In social innovation, strategy plays an important role
(Vitale, 2005). Business people will direct social in-
novation projects with detailed plans that will add
public value.
In addition, the most serious challenge of social
innovation is resources (Cels et al., 2012). Orga-
nization that have good resources do not guarantee
success if the business owner cannot manage these
resources effectively (Sirmon et al., 2011) (Barney
et al., 2011). So, it needs to be described how to man-
age resources in accordance with social innovation to
be achieved in an area. From the discussion above,
the relationship between each knowledge dimensions
can be seen in the form of conceptual model in Figure
8 which can be developed for further research.
Figure 8: The conceptual model.
5 CONCLUSIONS
After conducting search of journal in the main source
(Science Direct and Emerald Insight), with the inclu-
sion and exclusion, it was obtained that 75 results
in Science Direct and 17 results in Emerald Insight.
During the research, the papers that has highest value
are paper [5], [6], [7], [8], [17] with 6 as its values.
It was assumed that these papers answered RQ1 and
RQ2. Whereas, the paper who has the lowest value
which is 1 was paper [14] where the journal only an-
swer RQ2 althought it was no clear enough. RQ1 has
been answered that some various definitions from the
researcher in the founded journal could be concluded
that “Social innovation is the innovation aims to
give solution toward main challenge faced by so-
ciety and in parallel, improve the capacity of so-
ciety and other actors in creating service and new
product that is beneficial not only in terms of busi-
ness but also in the improvement of life quality of
the society”. Next investigation was for RQ2 which
is the type of ICT that was mostly used to the social
innovation in the founded paper. That ICT was mo-
bile application. It was because the application for
mobile was in the rapid development. Beside it usage
in business, mobile application was also used to de-
velop society and region. For future research, we can
related mobile application for Social Innovation with
Business Strategy or IS/IT Strategy.
CONRIST 2019 - International Conferences on Information System and Technology
134
REFERENCES
Ashraf, M. and Malik, B. T. (2011). Gonokendra model:
a response to “information poverty” in rural areas of
bangladesh. Information Technology for development,
17(2):153–161.
Barney, J. B., Ketchen Jr, D. J., and Wright, M. (2011).
The future of resource-based theory: revitalization or
decline? Journal of management, 37(5):1299–1315.
Cecchini, S. and Scott, C. (2003). Can information and
communications technology applications contribute to
poverty reduction? lessons from rural india. Informa-
tion Technology for development, 10(2):73–84.
Cels, S., De Jong, J., and Nauta, F. (2012). Agents of
change: strategy and tactics for social innovation.
Brookings Institution Press.
Cui, M., Pan, S. L., Newell, S., and Cui, L. (2017). Strategy,
resource orchestration and e-commerce enabled social
innovation in rural china. The Journal of Strategic In-
formation Systems, 26(1):3–21.
Davenport, T. H. (1993). Process innovation: reengineering
work through information technology. Harvard Busi-
ness Press.
Davies, A. (2014). Social innovation process and social en-
trepreneurship. Theoretical approaches to social in-
novation: A critical literature review, pages 60–78.
Djaali, A. (2008). Skala likert. Yogyakarta: Andi Offiset.
Kitchenham, B. and Charters, S. (2007). Guidelines for per-
forming systematic literature reviews in software en-
gineering.
Lee, H., Harindranath, G., Oh, S., and Kim, D.-J. (2015).
Provision of mobile banking services from an actor–
network perspective: Implications for convergence
and standardization. Technological Forecasting and
Social Change, 90:551–561.
Mulgan, G. (2010). Measuring social value. Stanford Social
Innovation Review, 8(3):38–43.
Rahman, S. A., Taghizadeh, S. K., Ramayah, T., and Alam,
M. M. D. (2017). Technology acceptance among
micro-entrepreneurs in marginalized social strata: The
case of social innovation in bangladesh. Technological
Forecasting and Social Change, 118:236–245.
Sandeep, M. and Ravishankar, M. (2015). Social innova-
tions in outsourcing: An empirical investigation of
impact sourcing companies in india. The Journal of
Strategic Information Systems, 24(4):270–288.
Shin, Y. and Kim, J. (2018). Data-centered persuasion:
Nudging user’s prosocial behavior and designing so-
cial innovation. Computers in Human Behavior,
80:168–178.
Sirmon, D. G., Hitt, M. A., Ireland, R. D., and Gilbert,
B. A. (2011). Resource orchestration to create com-
petitive advantage: Breadth, depth, and life cycle ef-
fects. Journal of management, 37(5):1390–1412.
Thatchenkery, T., Kash, D., and Stough, R. (2004). In-
formation technology services and economic develop-
ment: The indian experience. Technological Forecast-
ing & Social Change, 8(71):771–776.
Van der Have, R. P. and Rubalcaba, L. (2016). Social inno-
vation research: An emerging area of innovation stud-
ies? Research Policy, 45(9):1923–1935.
Vitale, T. (2005). How do you build a shared interest? a
case of social innovation between strategy and orga-
nizational learning. A Case of Social Innovation be-
tween Strategy and Organizational Learning (January
2005).
Wehn, U. and Evers, J. (2015). The social innovation po-
tential of ict-enabled citizen observatories to increase
eparticipation in local flood risk management. Tech-
nology in Society, 42:187–198.
Wu, Y. J., Liu, W.-J., and Yuan, C.-H. (2018). A mobile-
based barrier-free service transportation platform for
people with disabilities. Computers in Human Behav-
ior, page 105776.
Yunus, M. (1998). Alleviating poverty through technology.
Science, 282(5388):409–410.
Information and Communication Technologies and Social Innovation: A Structured Literature Review
135