Economic Geography
The present period – studies of regional
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Economic and social geography
The present period – studies of regional
innovation systems and learning regions This focus on innovation turned my attention towards mechanisms for upgrad- ing the innovative capacity of SMEs and industrial districts/regional clusters. The ideas of regional innovation systems and learning regions starting turning up around the mid 1990s. Regional innovation systems (RIS) are defined as ‘interacting knowledge generation and exploitation subsystems linked to global, national and other regional subsystems’ (Cooke 2004: 3). An RIS is not identical with a cluster since RIS normally supports more than one cluster. Recent work on innovation systems indicates that the region is a key level at which innovative capac- ity is shaped and economic processes coordinated and governed. This has among Economic geography as (regional) contexts 179 other things led to governments and agencies at various geographical levels look- ing at regional innovation systems as key elements of their innovation policy. My own studies of regional innovation systems were initiated when I (in addi- tion to being professor in human geography in Oslo [since 1993]) was associated with the STEP group in Oslo as a senior researcher and scientific advisor. 8 Here I – together with my first doctoral student (now professor), Arne Isaksen – built up research on regional innovation systems, clusters and innovation policy towards SMEs resulting in many large national and international research proj- ects (e.g. see Asheim and Isaksen 1997; Asheim et al. 2003). This research continued when moving my chair in human geography in 1999 to a new Centre for technology, innovation and culture at the University of Oslo, initiated by among others Jan Fagerberg (Fagerberg et al. 2005), and finally when taking up the chair in economic geography at Lund University (after Gunnar Törnqvist) in August 2001, where a comprehensive Nordic project on SMEs and RIS was carried out 2002–3 (Asheim and Coenen 2005). 9 This research has been further stimulated by the establishment of CIRCLE (Centre for Innovation, Research and Competence in the Learning Economy), where my research group undertakes international comparisons of regional innovation systems with the aim of contributing to theoretical advances and presenting new empirical findings. 10 The research has developed and implemented in concrete studies a new approach for doing comparative analyses using the following main dimensions: industrial knowledge bases, distinguishing between industries based on analytical (e.g. biotech), synthetic (e.g. mechanical engineering), and symbolic (film industry) knowledge bases, and institutional frameworks applying the vari- eties of capitalism distinction between coordinated and liberal market economies (using regions in the Nordic countries and Canada as cases) (Hall and Soskice 2001). Bringing these analytical dimensions together has renewed the study of RIS, and has brought about a better understanding of the workings and impacts of RIS. I believe that innovation processes of firms are strongly shaped by their specific knowledge base, and, thus, need different competencies as well as supporting innovation policies (Asheim and Coenen 2005; Asheim and Gertler 2005). After years of influential research on the importance of territorial agglomerations for regional economic growth more work is now needed to disclose and reveal the contingencies, particularities and specificities of the various contexts and envi- ronments where knowledge creation, innovation and entrepreneurship take place in order to obtain a better understanding of factors enabling or impeding these processes. Differentiating between knowledge bases and institutional frameworks represents a first attempt of such an ‘unpacking strategy’. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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