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Emerging Entrepreneurial Universities in China: A Case Study of Triple Helix Dynamics and Sustainable Innovation in Shenzhen

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  • Isabella Weijia Ding

    (UCL Global Business School for Health, University College London, London E20 2AF, UK)

Abstract

This article examines the emergence of entrepreneurial universities within China’s innovation-driven development agenda, with Shenzhen used as a regional case through which to analyse this process. Drawing on the Triple Helix literature and its later Quadruple and Quintuple Helix extensions, this study uses a qualitative case-study design that combines policy and archival analysis, descriptive questionnaire evidence from 132 respondents, and 42 semi-structured interviews with university, industry, government and venture-capital actors. The analysis shows how Shenzhen’s innovation capacity has been built through the interaction of firm-led technological upgrading, enabling municipal governance and a gradual repositioning of universities. Rather than following the university-centred pattern often associated with mature Western innovation systems, Shenzhen displays a hybrid Helix configuration in which universities acquire entrepreneurial functions through talent provision, external partnerships, practice-oriented knowledge exchange and organisational adaptation. This article therefore contributes to debates on entrepreneurial universities by explaining how such institutions can develop in late-developing, industry-led regions where conventional research infrastructure is initially limited. It also offers policy implications for strengthening sustainable university entrepreneurship, cross-sector coordination and regional innovation resilience in emerging economies.

Suggested Citation

  • Isabella Weijia Ding, 2026. "Emerging Entrepreneurial Universities in China: A Case Study of Triple Helix Dynamics and Sustainable Innovation in Shenzhen," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(10), pages 1-21, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:10:p:4866-:d:1941698
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