Diagnóstico e evoluçäo das afasias de causa vascular
Caldas, Alexandre Castro
1979
The inovation system vs. cluster process : common contributive elements towards regional development
Type
conferenceObject
Creator
Publisher
Identifier
RAMOS, George ; SANTOS, Domingos (2004) - The inovation system vs. cluster process : common contributive elements towards regional development. European Regional Science Association Congress, Porto, 25-29 de Agosto - ERSA Conference papers. Porto : ERSA.
Title
The inovation system vs. cluster process : common contributive elements towards regional development
Subject
Innovation system
Cluster
Knowledge-based economies
Cluster
Knowledge-based economies
Date
2009-12-30T16:22:46Z
2009-12-30T16:22:46Z
2004-08-25
2009-12-30T16:22:46Z
2004-08-25
Description
Recent approaches to the study on innovations enhance some similar aspects of the innovation process in knowledge-based economies: (i) the systemic and interrelated nature of innovation and (ii) its geographic and inter-economic activities density of networking.One perspective is linked to the innovation systems approach at the national, regional and local level. What we know so far is that most specialized forms of knowledge are becoming a short lived resource, in face of the (increasingly) fast changes that are ocurring in the global economy; it's the ability to learn permanently and to adapt to this fast changing scenario that determines the innovative performance of firms, regions and countries. Another approach is to be found in the research on cluster development, where proximity and interrelated technical/technological linkage are the main features to take under consideration. Althought these two approaches operate at slightly different spatial scale of analysis, they both allow the identification of a set of key factors that contribute to understand the way in which institutions and actors, considering the innovation system or the cluster process, participate in the innovation atmosphere and in the economic growth. Nevertheless, both approaches show the same limitation: they tend to focalise into the descriptive and analytical level, disregarding the explanatory level. Local and regional authorities are, mainly, interested in the process of cluster intensificiation in the local and regional economies context. These features stess out one other controversy level: are the "hard" location factors (the concrete tangible location factors) more important than the "soft" location factors (qualitative, intangible factor) or vice-versa? This paper aims to explore the current knowledge about this process and to open some fields of future research.
Access restrictions
openAccess
Language
eng
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