by Dimitri Uzunidis (Editor)
About the Author
Dimitri Uzunidis, Research Unit on Industry and Innovation, University of Littoral Côte d'Opale, France
About this book
In macro-, meso- and micro-economic systems, the concept of innovation involves a variety of resources and functions. It includes all formal and informal institutions, networks and actors that influence innovation and act as innovation boosters within companies, at the territorial level, at the level of innovation networks or in national economies.
This book deals with innovation in a globalized context in terms of the entrepreneur, enterprise, territorial and sectoral systems and national systems of innovation in which collective innovation processes are formed.
Table of contents
Introduction
Chapter 1. Enterprise Knowledge Capital and Innovation: Definition, Roles and Challenges
1.1. Knowledge capital: definition and roles
1.1.1. Information and knowledge
1.1.2. Definition of knowledge capital
1.1.3. Knowledge capital and managing knowledge
1.2. Productive use of knowledge capital
1.2.1. Knowledge capital and the production of new goods and services
1.2.2. Knowledge capital and the cohesiveness of work collectives
1.2.3. The use of knowledge capital in the digital era: reduction of the production process completion time
1.3. Conclusion
1.4. Bibliography
Chapter 2. The Non-economic Values of Innovation
2.1. Introduction
2.2. The development of business models caused by digitization
2.3. Extending the notion of value generation to include non-economic values
2.4. Putting forward a value system to be considered when creating innovation business models
2.5. How values can be used in a systemic of innovation
2.6. Conclusion
2.7. Bibliography
Chapter 3. Long-term Survival of Innovative Organizations
3.1. Long-term survival: finding a balance between change and continuity
3.2. Multiple possibilities between change and continuity
3.2.1. A balance resulting from a structural, spatial and architectural separation of opposite forces: the theory of structural ambidexterity
3.2.2. Reaching an equilibrium by temporally alternating between the two dynamics: punctuated equilibrium theory
3.2.3. Finding a balance through ambidexterity in individuals and more generally in the organizational context: the contextual ambidexterity approach
3.3. Which innovation strategy should companies aiming for long-term survival adopt? The concept of prudent innovation
3.4. Conclusion
3.5. Bibliography
Chapter 4. The Resources Potential of the Innovative Entrepreneur
4.1. The resources potential of innovative entrepreneurs
4.1.1. Defining innovative entrepreneurs
4.1.2. The resources potential of innovative entrepreneurs
4.2. The innovative entrepreneur’s resources: knowledge, finance and social networks
4.2.1. Knowledge and financial means, the indispensable resources for innovative entrepreneurs
4.2.2. Mobility thanks to the networks of social relationships
4.3. Conclusion
4.4. Bibliography
Chapter 5. Innovation Spaces: New Places for Collective Intelligence?
5.1. Introduction
5.2. Innovation spaces: the spaces where all the new innovation trends coexist
5.3. Which types of spaces, to what innovating or innovative ends?
5.4. The innovation space: a design issue approached in the wrong way
5.5. Places in the service of collective intelligence?
5.6. Conclusion
5.7. Bibliography
Chapter 6. The Innovative Territory
6.1. Territory and innovation: a collective process of co-construction
6.2. Territorial proximities and cooperation networks
6.2.1. Challenging the predominant role of geographic proximity
6.2.2. Different forms of proximity
6.3. The complementary nature of local and distant collaborations
6.4. Conclusion: project territories and new governance systems
6.5. Bibliography
Chapter 7. The “Eco-innovative” Milieu: Industrial Ecology and Diversification of Territorial Economy
7.1. Industrial ecology and the “eco-innovative” milieu
7.1.1. Industrial ecology and industrial regions
7.1.2. Industrial ecology as an “eco-innovative” milieu
7.2. From specialization to “smart” diversification: altering the economic trajectory of a region
7.2.1. Specialization versus diversification
7.2.2. “Smart” diversification and a new territorial path
7.3. Conclusion
7.4. Bibliography
Chapter 8. Responsible Innovation
8.1. Foundations
8.1.1. Responsibility in science and technology
8.1.2. Technology assessment
8.2. Responsible research and innovation in European policies
8.3. Responsible innovation and companies
8.4. Conclusion
8.5. Bibliography
Chapter 9. Innovation Capacities as a Prerequisite for Forming a National Innovation System
9.1. Institutions and innovation capacities
9.1.1. Taking institutions into consideration in economic theory
9.1.2. Institutions and innovation capacities
9.2. Innovation capacities and national innovation systems
9.2.1. National innovation systems and their heterogeneity
9.2.2. Innovation capacities, the inseparable pillars of NIS
9.3. Conclusion
9.4. Bibliography
Length: 234 pages
Publisher: Wiley-ISTE; 1 edition (October 16, 2018)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1786303779
ISBN-13: 978-1786303776