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European Planning Studies

Volume 16, Issue 9, 2008

Varieties of Innovation and Welfare Regimes: The Leap from R&D Projects to the Development of City-regions

Varieties of Innovation and Welfare Regimes: The Leap from R&D Projects to the Development of City-regions

DOI:
10.1080/09654310802401748
Smita Srinivasa*, Kati-Jasmin Kosonenb, Kimmo Viljamaab & Juha Nummic

pages 1267-1291

Available online: 12 Nov 2008

Abstract

In the varieties of capitalism, welfare capitalism, and systems of innovation literatures, the university is a critical actor as public employer, trainer and provider of several public goods. However, there is relatively weak enquiry into the spatial and institutional characteristics of university-led economic development and a relative neglect of the political economy and organizational features of embedded R&D projects in urban and regional planning. We argue that technical projects, far from being stand-alone entities, have taken on the broad characteristics of the university and city-regional development mandate in where they reside. The article is based on an exploratory study of university–industry R&D projects in six city regions of Finland. We show that: (a) the shifting role of universities reflects a changed context for the welfare state in which the “public” debate occurs; (b) These create distinct issues of legitimacy and coalition-building in local economic planning which give rise to diverse regional interpretations of single technology programmes; (c) We categorise three general types of models of R&D projects in universities and propose tentative categories of contributions to “public knowledge”. This diversity of interpretations and outcomes leaves us optimistic regarding the ability of city-regions to adapt and plan for the future against a changing welfare state that shapes the university's role, yet more cautious about any clear-cut “public knowledge” emerging from such technical projects.

 

Details

  • Citation information:
  • Available online: 12 Nov 2008

Author affiliations

  • a Department of Urban Planning, Columbia University, New York, USA
  • b Research Unit for Urban and Regional Development Studies Sente, University of Tampere, Finland
  • c Department of Industrial Engineering and Management, Helsinki University of Technology, Helsinki, Finland

Journal news

  • 2010 Impact Factor: 0.645; 2010 5-year Impact Factor: 1.184
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