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Public Research and Industrial Innovation: A Comparison of US and European Innovation Systems in the Life Sciences
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2003
Year
EducationPublic-private PartnershipIndustrial OrganizationNew Network ModelBureaucracyLife SciencesManagementCollaborative GovernanceTechnological InnovationIntellectual PropertyTechnology TransferPublic InvolvementPublic ResearchPublic PolicyGovernment FundingInnovation EconomicsPublic Policy EconomicsGovernment TransparencyInnovationIndustrial InnovationPolicy StudiesPublic FinanceInnovation StudyPublic EconomicsBusinessOpen InnovationKnowledge ManagementInnovation PolicySocial InnovationNetwork GovernanceTechnologyPolitical Science
This book re-examines the rationale for public policy, concluding that the prevailing ‘public knowledge' model is evolving towards a networked or distributed model of knowledge production and use in which public and private institutions play complementary roles. It provides a set of tools and models to assess the impact of the new network model of funding and governance, and argues that governments need to adapt their funding and administrative priorities and procedures to support the emergence and healthy growth of research networks. The book goes on to explain that interdependencies and complementarities in the production and distribution of knowledge require a new and more contextual, flexible and complex approach to government funding, monitoring and assessment.