Book Chapter10.1007/978-1-4614-2062-0_1
Mode 3 Knowledge Production in Quadruple Helix Innovation Systems
Elias G. Carayannis,David F. J. Campbell +1 more
- 01 Jan 2012
- pp 1-63
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define the terms and principles of knowledge creation, diffusion, and use, and establish a theoretical framework for their study, through which government, academia, industry and civil society are seen as key actors promoting a democratic approach to innovation through which strategy development and decision-making are exposed to feedback from key stakeholders, resulting in socially accountable policies and practices.
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Abstract: Developed and developing economies alike face increased resource scarcity and competitive rivalry. In this context, science and technology appear as an essential source of competitive and sustainable advantage at national and regional levels. However, the key determinant of their efficacy is the quality and quantity of entrepreneurship-enabled innovation that unlocks and captures the benefits of the science enterprise in the form of private, public, or hybrid goods. Linking basic and applied research with the market, via technology transfer and commercialization mechanisms, including government–university–industry partnerships and capital investments, constitutes the essential trigger mechanism and driving force of sustainable competitive advantage and prosperity. In this volume, the authors define the terms and principles of knowledge creation, diffusion, and use, and establish a theoretical framework for their study. In particular, they focus on the “Quadruple Helix” model, through which government, academia, industry, and civil society are seen as key actors promoting a democratic approach to innovation through which strategy development and decision-making are exposed to feedback from key stakeholders, resulting in socially accountable policies and practices.
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Citations
The Quintuple Helix innovation model: global warming as a challenge and driver for innovation
TL;DR: The Quadruple Helix innovation model as mentioned in this paper embeds the Triple Helix by adding as a fourth helix the media-based and culture-based public and civil society.
The Quadruple/Quintuple Innovation Helixes and Smart Specialisation Strategies for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth in Europe and Beyond
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore, explain and enact the conceptual as well as practical linkages between theory, policy and practice related to the ingredients of such growth based on regional innovation smart specialisation strategies and viewed via the "multi-focal lens" of the Quadruple and Quintuple Innovation Helixes (Quintuple Helix) perspective.
412
The ecosystem as helix: an exploratory theory‐building study of regional co‐opetitive entrepreneurial ecosystems as Quadruple/Quintuple Helix Innovation Models
Elias G. Carayannis,Evangelos Grigoroudis,David F. J. Campbell,David F. J. Campbell,Dirk Meissner,Dimitra Stamati +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore and profile the nature and dynamics of the Quadruple/Quintuple Helix Innovation System Model or Framework (government, university, industry, civil society, environment) as an enabler and enactor of regional co-opetitive entrepreneurial ecosystems which they conceptualize as fractal, multi-level, multimodal, mult-nodal and multi-lateral configurations of dynamic tangible and intangible assets within the resource-based view and the new theory of the growth of the firm.
389
Innovation, entrepreneurial, knowledge, and business ecosystems: Old wine in new bottles?
TL;DR: In this article, a systematic literature review (SLR) of ecosystems based on a selection of 104 articles and books and their archetypes is presented, where business, innovation, entrepreneurial, and knowledge ecosystems are identified and discussed.
306
Leading the Entrepreneurial University: Meeting the Entrepreneurial Development Needs of Higher Education Institutions
Allan Gibb,Ian Robertson +1 more
- 01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an innovation focus in that constitutes part of the preparation for the development of the Entrepreneurial University Leaders Programme (www.eulp.co.uk) which was launched in 2010 by the UK’s National Council for Graduate Entrepreneurship (NCGE), now renamed the National Centre for Education in Education (NCEE), and the Said Business School, University of Oxford.
303
References
Democratizing innovation: The evolving phenomenon of user innovation
Eric von Hippel
- 01 Mar 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an overview of what the international research community now understands about user-centered innovation and how it has been used in many fields, such as computing and communication.
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Market versus technology drive in R&D internationalization: four different patterns of managing research and development
TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify two principal location rationales-access to markets and access to science-as the principal determinants for four trends that lead to four archetypes of R&D internationalization: national treasure, market-driven, technology-driven and global.
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Triple Helix, Quadruple Helix and Quintuple Helix and How Do Knowledge, Innovation and the Environment Relate To Each Other?: A Proposed Framework for a Trans-disciplinary Analysis of Sustainable Development and Social Ecology
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed an inter-disciplinary and trans-disciplinary framework of analysis that relates knowledge, innovation and the environment (natural environments) to each other, which can be interpreted as an approach in line with sustainable development and social ecology.
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•Book Chapter
Market versus Technology Drive in R&D Internationalization
Maximilian von Zedtwitz,Oliver Gassmann +1 more
- 01 Jan 2001
TL;DR: This article identified two principal location rationales-access to markets and access to science-as the principal determinants for four trends that lead to four archetypes of R&D internationalization: national treasure, market-driven, technology-driven and global.
732
The Triple Helix, Quadruple Helix, …, and an N-Tuple of Helices: Explanatory Models for Analyzing the Knowledge-Based Economy?
TL;DR: Using the Triple Helix model of university–industry–government relations, one can measure the extent to which innovation has become systemic instead of assuming the existence of national (or regional) systems of innovations on a priori grounds.