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Institutions and the Geography of Innovation: A Regional Perspective

Zukauskaite, Elena LU (2013) In Meddelande från institutionen för kulturgeografi och ekonomisk geografi avhandlingar VIII.
Abstract
Economic geographers have long been intrigued by the role of institutions in innovation processes. It has been argued that differences in institutions are among the factors explaining the uneven innovative capacity across and within countries.

The regional innovation system approach highlights the interrelationships of firms, universities, governmental authorities and other organizations, as well as how those relations are influenced by the institutional setting in a region. There is a general perception in this stream of literature that institutions do matter. They constitute a legal framework for actions, define communication patterns and influence learning possibilities. However, these studies have been criticized for their... (More)
Economic geographers have long been intrigued by the role of institutions in innovation processes. It has been argued that differences in institutions are among the factors explaining the uneven innovative capacity across and within countries.

The regional innovation system approach highlights the interrelationships of firms, universities, governmental authorities and other organizations, as well as how those relations are influenced by the institutional setting in a region. There is a general perception in this stream of literature that institutions do matter. They constitute a legal framework for actions, define communication patterns and influence learning possibilities. However, these studies have been criticized for their lack of discussion of the interaction between institutions at different geographical levels, the relation between individuals and institutions and the impact of changes in the institutional framework on innovation activities.

This thesis takes the regional innovation system approach as a point of departure and aims to advance knowledge about the role of institutions (i.e. hinderers vs enablers) in innovation processes within regional innovation systems. It especially focuses on the interaction of different types of institutions at different geographical levels, on how institutional influence changes as an innovation process develops, and on the role of regional authorities in changing institutional conditions for the actors. The theoretical framework relates the insights of regional innovation systems studies to theories of new institutionalism in organizational studies, new and old institutional economics and historical institutionalism. Relating regional innovation systems studies to institutional theories enables conceptualization of institutional diversity within the system. The reference is to different types (e.g. regulative, normative, cognitive) and different geographical levels (e.g. regional, national, global) of institutions which form a complex framework for innovation activities. Organizational diversity is considered by using the knowledge base (i.e. analytical, synthetic, symbolic) approach, which can be applied at industry, firm, and activity levels.

The empirical focus of this thesis is on Scania, which is a region in Southern Sweden. Previous studies have analyzed various sub-sets of Scania’s innovation system and highlighted on-going innovation activities in the region. The region is also characterized by organizational diversity including various actors when it comes to a critical knowledge base for innovation activities. Therefore, Scania is a suitable case for the analysis.

The findings of this thesis reveal that institutional diversity with boundedly rational diverse actors leads to multiple paths of development within a region.

Since institutions have different incentives and functions, they can complement, reinforce or contradict each other while influencing innovation processes.

Organizational (i.e. critical knowledge base) and individual (i.e. position in the organization, personal qualities) characteristics lead to different responses of actors to institutional incentives. For example, increasing consumer interest in health issues (changing norm) creates an incentive for firms in the food sector to develop healthy products. When the combination of analytic and synthetic knowledge bases is critical to the innovation activities of firms, they respond to this incentive by developing value added products with health benefits, while firms dominated by the synthetic knowledge base from one field of expertise introduce products which are ‘healthy in a natural way’ – i.e. sugar-free (or reduced sugar) alternatives of juice, cereals, or ketchup. Furthermore, some institutions are more relevant at different stages of innovation processes than others. For example, during the initiation and establishment phases of organizational innovation (i.e. novel organizational form of a research unit) the institutions that hinder a change process are most prominent, since all the decisions related to the formalities of the unit then have to be made. The institutions that are related to benefiting from the results of a change process start playing an important role in a later phase.

Policy makers should take institutional and organizational diversity into account when designing regional support programs. Knowledge base characteristics can serve as guidelines for the design of the programs at sectoral level and facilitate fine-tuned implementation at firm level. Awareness of institutional diversity enables the identification of supporting and contradicting institutions, and is necessary to achieve the goals of the programs.

This thesis consists of four articles that have been published or submitted to peer-review journals, and an introductory part which presents a theoretical overview and discusses the methodological approach and main conclusions. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Popular Abstract in Swedish

Syftet med denna avhandling är att skapa en bättre förståelse för vilken betydelse institutioner har för innovationsprocesser inom regionala innovationssystem. Den fokuserar särskilt på hur olika typer av institutioner på skilda geografiska nivåer samspelar; hur institutionell påverkan förändras i samband med att innovationsprocesser utvecklas över tid; samt vilka möjligheter regionala myndigheter och andra politiska aktörer har att förändra de institutionella förutsättningarna för aktörerna inom det regionala innovationssystemet.

Avhandlingens teoretiska referensram bygger på tidigare forskning om regionala innovationssystem, nyinstitutionell teori från organisationsforskning,... (More)
Popular Abstract in Swedish

Syftet med denna avhandling är att skapa en bättre förståelse för vilken betydelse institutioner har för innovationsprocesser inom regionala innovationssystem. Den fokuserar särskilt på hur olika typer av institutioner på skilda geografiska nivåer samspelar; hur institutionell påverkan förändras i samband med att innovationsprocesser utvecklas över tid; samt vilka möjligheter regionala myndigheter och andra politiska aktörer har att förändra de institutionella förutsättningarna för aktörerna inom det regionala innovationssystemet.

Avhandlingens teoretiska referensram bygger på tidigare forskning om regionala innovationssystem, nyinstitutionell teori från organisationsforskning, institutionell ekonomi och historisk institutionalism. Denna kombination av relaterade teoretiska infallsvinklar möjliggör en konceptualisering av institutionell mångfald inom det regionala innovationssystemet. Det innebär att man kan ta hänsyn till olika typer av institutioner (t.ex. reglerande, normativa, kognitiva) och institutioner på olika geografiska nivåer (t.ex. regionala, nationella, globala) vilka sammantaget bildar det institutionella ramverk som påverkar innovationsprocesser. Begreppet organisatorisk mångfald förstås här utifrån tre kunskapsbaser (analytisk, syntetisk, symbolisk kunskap) som appliceras på industri-, företags-, och aktivitetsnivåer. Den empiriska analysen fokuserar på Skåne.

Analysen visar att det finns flera olika utvecklingsvägar inom regionen vilket förklaras av förekomsten av en institutionell mångfald och en bred uppsättning aktörer. Olika typer av institutioner medför olika typer av incitament och funktioner som kompletterar, förstärker eller motverkar varandra i sin påverkan på innovationsprocesser. Samtidigt reagerar olika aktörer olika på samma institutionella incitament på grund av organisatoriska (kritisk kunskapsbas) eller individuella (position inom organisation, personliga egenskaper) särdrag. Vidare är vissa institutioner mer relevanta än andra under olika faser av innovationsprocesser.

Avhandlingens slutsats är att regionala myndigheter bör ta hänsyn till institutionell mångfald när de utvecklar och genomför innovationsstrategier. Medvetenhet om vilken kritisk kunskapsbas som dominerar en viss bransch eller sektor kan ge riktlinjer för utvecklingen av innovationsstrategier på industrinivå samt underlätta dess genomförande på företagsnivå. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Prof. Gertler, Meric, University of Toronto
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Economic Geography, Innovation, Innovation System, Institutions, Knowledge base, Region, Scania, Sweden
in
Meddelande från institutionen för kulturgeografi och ekonomisk geografi avhandlingar
volume
VIII
pages
198 pages
defense location
Sal 111 (Världen), Geocentrum I, Sölvegatan 10, Lund
defense date
2013-10-04 13:00:00
ISBN
978-91-7473-633-5 (print)
978-91-7473-634-2 (pdf)
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Centre for Innovation, Research and Competence in the Learning Economy (CIRCLE) (016630900), Department of Human Geography (LUR000049)
id
bb5e9658-f9aa-47e0-8cbb-663f5cf131d3 (old id 4006998)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 13:27:10
date last changed
2019-05-22 07:46:35
@phdthesis{bb5e9658-f9aa-47e0-8cbb-663f5cf131d3,
  abstract     = {{Economic geographers have long been intrigued by the role of institutions in innovation processes. It has been argued that differences in institutions are among the factors explaining the uneven innovative capacity across and within countries.<br/><br>
The regional innovation system approach highlights the interrelationships of firms, universities, governmental authorities and other organizations, as well as how those relations are influenced by the institutional setting in a region. There is a general perception in this stream of literature that institutions do matter. They constitute a legal framework for actions, define communication patterns and influence learning possibilities. However, these studies have been criticized for their lack of discussion of the interaction between institutions at different geographical levels, the relation between individuals and institutions and the impact of changes in the institutional framework on innovation activities.<br/><br>
This thesis takes the regional innovation system approach as a point of departure and aims to advance knowledge about the role of institutions (i.e. hinderers vs enablers) in innovation processes within regional innovation systems. It especially focuses on the interaction of different types of institutions at different geographical levels, on how institutional influence changes as an innovation process develops, and on the role of regional authorities in changing institutional conditions for the actors. The theoretical framework relates the insights of regional innovation systems studies to theories of new institutionalism in organizational studies, new and old institutional economics and historical institutionalism. Relating regional innovation systems studies to institutional theories enables conceptualization of institutional diversity within the system. The reference is to different types (e.g. regulative, normative, cognitive) and different geographical levels (e.g. regional, national, global) of institutions which form a complex framework for innovation activities. Organizational diversity is considered by using the knowledge base (i.e. analytical, synthetic, symbolic) approach, which can be applied at industry, firm, and activity levels.<br/><br>
The empirical focus of this thesis is on Scania, which is a region in Southern Sweden. Previous studies have analyzed various sub-sets of Scania’s innovation system and highlighted on-going innovation activities in the region. The region is also characterized by organizational diversity including various actors when it comes to a critical knowledge base for innovation activities. Therefore, Scania is a suitable case for the analysis.<br/><br>
The findings of this thesis reveal that institutional diversity with boundedly rational diverse actors leads to multiple paths of development within a region.<br/><br>
Since institutions have different incentives and functions, they can complement, reinforce or contradict each other while influencing innovation processes.<br/><br>
Organizational (i.e. critical knowledge base) and individual (i.e. position in the organization, personal qualities) characteristics lead to different responses of actors to institutional incentives. For example, increasing consumer interest in health issues (changing norm) creates an incentive for firms in the food sector to develop healthy products. When the combination of analytic and synthetic knowledge bases is critical to the innovation activities of firms, they respond to this incentive by developing value added products with health benefits, while firms dominated by the synthetic knowledge base from one field of expertise introduce products which are ‘healthy in a natural way’ – i.e. sugar-free (or reduced sugar) alternatives of juice, cereals, or ketchup. Furthermore, some institutions are more relevant at different stages of innovation processes than others. For example, during the initiation and establishment phases of organizational innovation (i.e. novel organizational form of a research unit) the institutions that hinder a change process are most prominent, since all the decisions related to the formalities of the unit then have to be made. The institutions that are related to benefiting from the results of a change process start playing an important role in a later phase.<br/><br>
Policy makers should take institutional and organizational diversity into account when designing regional support programs. Knowledge base characteristics can serve as guidelines for the design of the programs at sectoral level and facilitate fine-tuned implementation at firm level. Awareness of institutional diversity enables the identification of supporting and contradicting institutions, and is necessary to achieve the goals of the programs.<br/><br>
This thesis consists of four articles that have been published or submitted to peer-review journals, and an introductory part which presents a theoretical overview and discusses the methodological approach and main conclusions.}},
  author       = {{Zukauskaite, Elena}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-7473-633-5 (print)}},
  keywords     = {{Economic Geography; Innovation; Innovation System; Institutions; Knowledge base; Region; Scania; Sweden}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  series       = {{Meddelande från institutionen för kulturgeografi och ekonomisk geografi avhandlingar}},
  title        = {{Institutions and the Geography of Innovation: A Regional Perspective}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/6123396/4015726.pdf}},
  volume       = {{VIII}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}