Legitimation dynamics: How SROI could mobilize resources for new constituencies

Eval Program Plann. 2017 Oct:64:110-115. doi: 10.1016/j.evalprogplan.2016.11.010. Epub 2016 Dec 19.

Abstract

The following critical essay on the social return on investment (SROI) methodology is broken into two parts. In the first section, focusing on the categorization dynamics of the SROI, I review a set of methodological and ethical tensions surrounding the SROI, using examples from my own work and other published works using SROI. These tensions include the fact that the project requires standardization to achieve comparability while concurrently offering a flexibility in constructing a narrative of impact that is attractive to users. In the second section, focusing on the legitimation dynamics, I define a narrow scope for where, despite the aforementioned pitfalls, that the SROI can be quite effective in building a rhetorical argument for directing material resources. The essay argues that despite ongoing methodological challenges, the investor lens and market logic undergirding the metric provide a powerful frame for persuasion that can be used to construct worthiness and value creation for constituents not already constructed as such.

Keywords: SROI; Social impact; Valuation.

MeSH terms

  • Cost-Benefit Analysis / methods*
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis / standards*
  • Humans
  • Models, Economic
  • Program Evaluation / methods*
  • Program Evaluation / standards*
  • Social Work / economics*