Transforming the Community Impact of Campus Space: Bow Valley College and WINS Open a Social Enterprise Thrift Store

Bow Valley College and Women In Need Society (WINS) have partnered to launch a new on-campus thrift store that combines affordability, sustainability, and hands-on learning. The initiative gives students access to low-cost essentials while creating real-world learning opportunities in social enterprise and community impact.

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What is social entrepreneurship?

We define social entrepreneurship as using business models (selling a good or service) to enhance social impact. This reflects most Canadian definitions.

Beyond balance

Many see the social and the entrepreneurial as being in opposition, like two sides of a scale that needs to be balanced. Instead, we see the social and the entrepreneurial as partners in progress.  

Aspirational

We support a social entrepreneurship movement that dares to ask, “How far could we go in solving the world’s problems, and even fulfilling our potential as human beings, if we fully harnessed the power of business models to enhance social impact?”

The harsh reality is new ways of doing things in an old system typically yields old results. It’s akin to planting a flower in the middle of a desert. Embracing the recommended core disciplines (‘action’, ‘learning’ and ‘leveraging’), guided by new mindsets (‘co-creation’, ‘electric judo’ and ‘systems health’) and an ecosystems approach presents the best chance of producing the culture change we need, serving the goals of the government, and maximizing the potential of the SIE for all Albertans. Perhaps the crux of the matter was addressed in one question within the consultation documents: “How can we leverage ALL types of innovation?” The acronym for “action”, “leveraging” and “learning” added to “innovation” could be “ALL Inn.” This could be Alberta’s rallying cry and represent: • Innovation will be everywhere. • Innovation includes everyone/everyone has a role. • Alberta is committed to the innovation agenda. We applaud the Alberta Government for taking the bold step of creating a Social Innovation Endowment. As a partner in this work, we see ourselves as accountable for doing all we can to ensure the success of the SIE in Alberta and championing its future. We believe that Government should hold the social innovation sector to high account as a partner in this work and empower it to do the work needed so that all Albertans may benefit from the opportunities that social innovation holds. If the SIE is to achieve its ambitious, arguably audacious, goal of solving ‘wicked problems’, Alberta will have to go “ALL Inn.”.

[author] [author_image timthumb=’on’]https://tricofoundation.ca/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Jasmine-Retzer-crop.jpg[/author_image] [author_info]By Jasmine Retzer, Student, Mount Royal University • The Calgary social enterprises profiled in this article will be the

SEWF 2013 was pleased to host a wide array of local students, including five from West Island College. The following story reproduces

Lean Machine, by April Glavine

When I started Lean Machine in 2005, it was a bold move. The thought of an independent organization attempting to enter a

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