1st Edition

Complex Adaptive Innovation Systems Relatedness and Transversality in the Evolving Region

By Philip Cooke Copyright 2012
    288 Pages 42 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    272 Pages 42 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Leading up to the financial crisis of 2008 and onwards, the shortcomings of traditional models of regional economic and environmental development had become increasingly evident. Rooted in the idea that ‘policy’ is an encumbrance to free markets, the stress on supply-side smoothing measures such as clusters and an over reliance on venture capital, the inadequacy of existing orthodoxies has come to be replaced by the notion of transversality.

    This approach has three strong characteristics that differentiate it from its failing predecessor. First, as the name implies, it seeks to finesse horizontal knowledge interactions as well as vertical ones, thus building ‘platforms’ of industrial interaction. Secondly, it is not a supply, but a demand side model in which needs-driven innovation rather than pure market competition prevails. Finally, it is ongoing through recessionary times, being more robust than over-specialized approaches to economic growth.

    The intellectual origins of transversality lie in an aspiration to promote eco-innovation, one of the key hopes of assisting Western regional and national economies to re-balance and escape recession. The policy models of key regional exponents of the concept are explored and their goals achievement is assessed. An array of policy instruments and measures is presented for hands-on policy implementation. The book will be of vital interest to academics as teachers and researchers as well as policy advisers and public servants.

    1. Introduction: Co-evolution, Complexity and Emergence in Regional Innovation Systems  2. What Went Wrong with the Vertical Process and Policy Perspective?  3.What is Transversality?  4. The Co-evoluttionary Origins of Transversatlity  5. Transversality and Transition in Innovation and Eco-Innovation: Towards Complex Adaptive Systems Analysis  6. Transition Regions and Eco-innovations: Studies in Complexity  7. Resilience, Relatedness & Complexity Geography: Strange Attractors in Regional Innovation  8. Complexity, Relatedness and Transverslity: Empirical Evidence of Regional Innovation Platform Policies  9. Complexity, Variety and the Emergent Properties of Regional Innovation Strategy

    Biography

    Philip Cooke is Director and Research Professor in Regional Development at the Centre for Advanced Studies, Cardiff University, UK.

    "The book is a must-read for anybody scientifically interested in innovation and complexity theory. It is very inspiring and also challenging in various aspects... The author digests and discusses an impressive amount of literature. As a much-appreciated feature, which makes the book more than a piece of solid theorising, the reader gets acquainted with numerous empirical cases and studies showing that the author is personally highly engaged in eco-innovation issues and is a true expert in the whole regional innovation field." - Petra Ahrweiler, University College Dublin; JASSS (2012)