Issue #6: The Future of Doing Good

Pioneers Post Quarterly Issue 6

The digital version of the whole of the sixth edition of our print magazine Pioneers Post Quarterly can be found below. We’ll be adding a selection of individual articles in their usual format over the next few weeks. Problems reading the issue? Contact us at hello@pioneerspost.com.

  • Cover feature: We’ve had quite a few years now of doing good but are we getting any better at it? We consider the future.
  • Global Focus: Exploring social enterprise in Argentina.
  • The Black Cab Interviews: Restaurateur with social meddling tendencies Iqbal Wahhab thinks charity sucks! We ask him to explain himself.
  • Impact measurement: The results of a survey present the most revealing picture yet about practices, uses and the tools that are used.
  • Behind the mask: CEOs are not the superheroes we thought they were. Turns out they have worries too - who knew?
  • PLUS: How tenants can help solve homelessness, we spend a night in a social enterprise hotel and also have a pint with Resonance boss Daniel Brewer.

Social innovation is not inclusive

Britain must pursue an ‘inclusive innovation’ agenda if it wants to improve its chances of reducing poverty, social exclusion and inequality on its shores, says Harsha Patel.

The future of doing good

The Big Lottery Fund is the biggest funder of community activity in the UK and it’s keen to make sure that money is well spent. Against a background of tough social challenges, Brexit and doubts over the future of charity, its new initiative is provoking debate about how we can all better support a thriving civil society.

Global Focus: Argentina

A new government in Argentina hopes to transform the country’s economic and social situation. Social investment experts Miguel Ferreyra de Bone and Alejandra Baigun predict that the time is right for social enterprise and social investment to take off.

Next stop: New Zealand

Next year’s Social Enterprise World Forum will be held in Christchurch. The host, the Ākina Foundation, believes that bringing the event to New Zealand is a huge opportunity to grow the country’s bubbling social enterprise sector.

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