Research

The Social Innovation Lab for Human Flourishing (SILF) drives interdisciplinary research to advance human flourishing through social innovation, collaborating with global experts and local practitioners to develop impactful, evidence-based solutions for social challenges.

  • collaborates with world-leading researchers from the UK, Europe, Africa, and South Asia on long-term, interdisciplinary projects;
  • engages closely with local thought and impact leaders and others in local ecosystems to leverage their understanding of community challenges, opportunities, and belief systems;
  • focuses on organisational innovations which, beyond economic success, enhance the human flourishing of an organisation’s stakeholders as well;
  • emphasises the development of solutions that are informed by local contexts and grounded in practical knowledge;
  • seeks to create sustainable social impact through collaborative research and real-world applications in diverse ecosystems.

Our ongoing research projects

Bangladesh: Human flourishing of teachers in rural areas

Our study explores how, in the aftermath of Covid-19, frontline workers in the third sector—large NGOs operating in rural and impoverished areas—are actively crafting their roles to make their work more meaningful. By using local knowledge, agency, and meaning-making, these workers are creating a bottom-up impact on their local communities. This research sheds light on how grassroots efforts within NGOs can drive meaningful change in response to crises.

South Africa: Sustainable strategic innovation for stakeholder flourishing

This research explores how multinational corporations based in South Africa engage in innovative strategies fostering economic, social, and environmental goals, and ultimately, the human flourishing of their key stakeholders, transcending traditional models of maximising shareholder value. 

Kenya: Human flourishing of entrepreneurs in urban informal settlements

The dominant approach to support entrepreneurs in informal settlements in emerging economies, such as in Africa, is training and funding (e.g., micro-finance) through external institutions such as social enterprises, NGOs, government organisations, and other national and international entities. In this case study, we identify and develop a new agentic, holistic model of how entrepreneurs in urban informal settlements in Kenya self-organise to enable human flourishing: including entrepreneurial innovation, growth and success; personal empowerment, and supporting other (novice) entrepreneurs.