Routledge Handbook of Politics and Technology (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Hilpert, Ulrich
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Routledge Handbook of Politics and Technology (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Hilpert, Ulrich
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This handbook provides a comprehensive global survey of the politics of technology. Written by an outstanding line up of distinguished scholars in the field, the handbook covers all aspects of the relationship between politics and technology. Forming the basis of this handbook are examples of regional development, country studies and a rich variety of technologies, as well as topical issues such as divergent political interests in relation to technology and the economic exploitation of technologies. Employing a comparative and interdisciplinary approach in order to analyse the interplay…mehr
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 516
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Oktober 2015
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317533375
- Artikelnr.: 43976970
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 516
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Oktober 2015
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317533375
- Artikelnr.: 43976970
the state: demand and support for new technologies and innovation 2.
Transatlantic comparison of continental innovation models. A
differentiation of regionalised processes of innovation in Europe and the
US 3. Technology and socio-economic development in the long run. A "long
wave"-perspective 4. Recognizing opportunities for S&T workforce
development and productivity. The gendered resource 5. Branding the
innovation place. Managing the soft infrastructure of innovation PART II:
Effects of technology policies: regional situations and how they form
innovative networks 6. Universities, revolutions and continuity in regional
innovation policies in Europe 7. Local clusters and global networks. The
role of different dimensions of proximity 8. The regional innovation
paradox revisited 9. The role of universities in the evolution of
technology-based economic development policies in the United States PART
III:Enabling government policies: technology development and innovation
difference between innovative countries and regions10. Diversities and
disparities in regional development. The role of culture 11. Explaining
differences in the adaptability of old industrial areas12. Chinese
geographical based innovation clustering. Major driving forces and their
functions 13. Putting Singapore in the global innovation map. The shifting
role of the state in the rapidly changing environment PART IV: Policy
instruments: how to realise techno-industrial innovation 14. Governmental
policies and technological innovation. Biotechnology and fast breeder
reactor technology revisited 15. Korean government and science and
technology development 16. 21st century universities as drivers for
innovation. The dimensions of learning, research, and collaboration 17.
Regional innovation policy and public-private partnerships 18. Ecosystems
of open innovation. Their applicability to the growth and the development
of economies within small countries and regions PART V: Effects of new
technologies: dynamism and change as outcomes of government policies 19.
Metropolitan locations in international high-tech networks. Collaboration
and exchange of creative labour as a basis for advanced socio-economic
development 20. Governance of biofuel production in the United States 21.
Competition in international automotive and aerospace technologies 22.
Nanotechnology for green and sustainable growth. A recent example on the
co-evolutionary development of a technology PART VI: Important players and
driving forces for science and innovative development: stability and change
23. The politics of technological innovation. The case of US solar industry
24. Clusters, unlike diamonds, are not forever. The European way to global
competition 25. Institutional transformations of technology policy in East
Asia. The rise of the entrepreneurial state 26. China's path towards
becoming a major world player in science and technology 27. Scientists'
motivation to innovate, catch-up and collaborate. A trans-disciplinary
perspective PART VII: Methods: How to analyse the role of the state and
enabling policies: comparative research and interdisciplinary design 28.
Innovation policies deserve a sound monitoring system. An agenda for policy
makers 29. Outcomes-oriented innovation policy design. An
analytic-diagnostic framework 30. Assessing the impact of knowledge
transfer policies. An international comparison of models and indicators of
universities' knowledge transfer performance 31. Simulations in politics
and technology. Innovation policies in the field of photovoltaic cells
Conclusions: 32. Conclusions. New phenomena and advanced analysis -
exploring variations for a deeper understanding of a rich diversity of
technologies and innovations
the state: demand and support for new technologies and innovation 2.
Transatlantic comparison of continental innovation models. A
differentiation of regionalised processes of innovation in Europe and the
US 3. Technology and socio-economic development in the long run. A "long
wave"-perspective 4. Recognizing opportunities for S&T workforce
development and productivity. The gendered resource 5. Branding the
innovation place. Managing the soft infrastructure of innovation PART II:
Effects of technology policies: regional situations and how they form
innovative networks 6. Universities, revolutions and continuity in regional
innovation policies in Europe 7. Local clusters and global networks. The
role of different dimensions of proximity 8. The regional innovation
paradox revisited 9. The role of universities in the evolution of
technology-based economic development policies in the United States PART
III:Enabling government policies: technology development and innovation
difference between innovative countries and regions10. Diversities and
disparities in regional development. The role of culture 11. Explaining
differences in the adaptability of old industrial areas12. Chinese
geographical based innovation clustering. Major driving forces and their
functions 13. Putting Singapore in the global innovation map. The shifting
role of the state in the rapidly changing environment PART IV: Policy
instruments: how to realise techno-industrial innovation 14. Governmental
policies and technological innovation. Biotechnology and fast breeder
reactor technology revisited 15. Korean government and science and
technology development 16. 21st century universities as drivers for
innovation. The dimensions of learning, research, and collaboration 17.
Regional innovation policy and public-private partnerships 18. Ecosystems
of open innovation. Their applicability to the growth and the development
of economies within small countries and regions PART V: Effects of new
technologies: dynamism and change as outcomes of government policies 19.
Metropolitan locations in international high-tech networks. Collaboration
and exchange of creative labour as a basis for advanced socio-economic
development 20. Governance of biofuel production in the United States 21.
Competition in international automotive and aerospace technologies 22.
Nanotechnology for green and sustainable growth. A recent example on the
co-evolutionary development of a technology PART VI: Important players and
driving forces for science and innovative development: stability and change
23. The politics of technological innovation. The case of US solar industry
24. Clusters, unlike diamonds, are not forever. The European way to global
competition 25. Institutional transformations of technology policy in East
Asia. The rise of the entrepreneurial state 26. China's path towards
becoming a major world player in science and technology 27. Scientists'
motivation to innovate, catch-up and collaborate. A trans-disciplinary
perspective PART VII: Methods: How to analyse the role of the state and
enabling policies: comparative research and interdisciplinary design 28.
Innovation policies deserve a sound monitoring system. An agenda for policy
makers 29. Outcomes-oriented innovation policy design. An
analytic-diagnostic framework 30. Assessing the impact of knowledge
transfer policies. An international comparison of models and indicators of
universities' knowledge transfer performance 31. Simulations in politics
and technology. Innovation policies in the field of photovoltaic cells
Conclusions: 32. Conclusions. New phenomena and advanced analysis -
exploring variations for a deeper understanding of a rich diversity of
technologies and innovations