Valuing What Matters: Reclaiming Social Value for System Change

This policy brief argues that social value must be reclaimed as a driver of system change rather than reduced to compliance exercises. It outlines a stewardship approach across three dimensions – procurement, governance, and community voice – demonstrating how public spending can serve as anchor investment, align decision-making around a shared purpose, and empower citizens as equal partners in shaping priorities. By reframing social value as system stewardship, the brief outlines how institutions can reduce inequalities and renew trust with communities.

Reclaiming social value as stewardship means treating public spending not as a compliance exercise but as an investment in trust, collaboration, and shared missions.”

Mark Swift – Founder & CEO, Wellbeing Enterprises CIC

Policymakers, commissioners, and civic leaders should reclaim social value as stewardship–embedding it in procurement, governance, and community participation. This means designing contracts as anchor investments, aligning public spending with shared missions such as health equity and net zero, and resourcing citizens to shape decisions as equal partners.


Meet the Author

Mark Swift

Mark Swift is a serial social entrepreneur who has championed community-centred approaches to health and wellbeing for more than two decades. As the Founder and CEO of Wellbeing Enterprises, he has built one of the UK’s leading organisations in this field, pioneering innovative models that empower people and communities to take charge of their own wellbeing.

A recognised thought leader and Ashoka Fellow, Mark’s work sits at the intersection of community power and system change – creating the conditions for citizens to lead, shape, and sustain thriving communities. He is also a Fellow of the Local Policy Innovation Partnership at City-REDI, University of Birmingham, and of the Heseltine Institute for Public Policy, Practice and Place at the University of Liverpool.

Find out more about Mark

Publications

Developing Place-Based Green Industrial Policy in the UK

In this report, Ed Atkins argues that green industrial policy in the UK must be rooted in place. Through the review of cases of Vestas in the Isle of Wight, BiFab in Scotland, and Britishvolt in north-east England, he illuminates how gaps between political ambition and political economy have led

What Are Place-Based Business Cases?

This report explains what a place-based business case is and how such cases can support more effective, strategic, and accountable investment decisions across local and national government. Drawing on insights from the Green Book review and City-REDI research, this document outlines three potential purposes for place-based business cases: funding gateways,

Examining the Evidence on Place‑Based Research Partnerships: Towards a Set of Principles for Successful Partnerships

This evidence review brings together academic and practice‑based literature to understand what makes place‑based research partnerships work effectively. It identifies the outcomes these partnerships can deliver, the infrastructure and systems that support success, the skills and expertise required, and the behaviours and values that underpin strong collaboration. The review also