DSI4EU consisted of four main work packages, alongside the project management work package.
Work Package 1 focused on two broad areas: policy and research on the one hand, and the development, management and curation of digitalsocial.eu on the other. The European Digital Social Innovation Index was developed to better understand the systemic and macro-level conditions which support the creation, growth and sustainability of DSI initiatives, and to analyse geographically how different parts of the European Union are positioned to support DSI initiatives. Through this work package, we also engaged policy makers at European, national and local levels to advocate for the importance of DSI and developed policy recommendations for the support of DSI at EU level. We carried out sustained communications work, promoting both the project and the DSI and CAPS field through social media, events, blogs, case studies and the DSI4EU newsletter, which went out to 2,700 subscribers monthly. On top of this, we organised two major DSI4EU events, the policy workshop “The road ahead for digital social innovation: How can the EU support digital technologies to tackle our biggest challenges?” in Brussels in April 2019 and the final event “New urban visions: Bringing digital social innovation into City Hall’ in Warsaw in June 2019, as well as the “Blockchain for Social Good Academy” in Turin in January 2019.
We worked to improve the digitalsocial.eu website, increasing engagement, and building the database of organisations and projects and the library of case studies. We built a repository of resources related to DSI and continued throughout the project to create exciting new content including opinion pieces, news and interviews.
Work Package 2 has sought to scale and grow DSI initiatives by establishing ‘DSI clusters’. DSI clusters are a set of thematic clusters each focused on DSI activities related to a specific societal challenges, such as migration, democracy or energy use. Each cluster leader carried out work researching the landscape, opportunities and challenges for DSI in their specific social area, including creating thematic analyses and guides for each social area, writing regular blogs and case studies, and identifying and curating resources for practitioners and other stakeholders. We ran a series of over 60 peer learning events focusing on exchanging knowledge and skills between peers (policy makers, funders and practitioners) working on and interested in DSI and its applications in specific social areas. Partners engaged different levels of government to advocate for DSI and help decision-makers understand how DSI can help them achieve their priorities, and what they can do to support the growth of DSI.
Work Package 3 has sought to develop an in depth understanding of the ‘future of DSI’ and to provide the necessary tools for social organisations, funders and policymakers to create more innovation capacity, develop a better understanding of how to shape the future and how to support emerging innovations on the digital social landscape. The first strand of this work focused on developing a series of trend analyses and trend guides exploring important technological and social trends with great: the open movement, digital wellbeing and ethical platforms and providing step provide step by step instructions for how organisations can embed these DSI approaches in their work. The second strand of our futures work focused on developing a series of positive future scenarios for how DSI might look like in ten years time. We published “Our Tech, Our Future” a collection of ten scenarios for the future of DSI, to inspire people to think about the future and the possibilities of digital technologies, and that the stories will play a part in helping us achieve technology’s potential as a tool for empowerment, education, democracy, sustainability, equality and social justice. We also created the “People’s Press”, a fictional community magazine from the year 2030 that contains visions of what our societies and communities might look like in a decade, and explores what role responsible, ethical and socially beneficial digital technologies might play within them.