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The Increasing Use of Dramaturgy in Regional Innovation Practice

In: Practice-Based Innovation: Insights, Applications and Policy Implications

Author

Listed:
  • Philip Cooke

    (Cardiff University)

Abstract

This chapter reports on advances in regional innovation practice. Regional innovation has become a maturing field of economic governance. Regions have become more prominent actors in the innovation field in the past decade. Innovation is widely seen by supranational, national and regional governance bodies and agencies as a mainspring of improved regional economic performance and wellbeing. Leading regional innovation practitioners are increasingly being understood as catalysts of innovation, a development in their earlier role as being supporter or partner in innovation essentially conducted by others. One technique this chapter devotes attention to where regional ‘orchestration’ of innovation occurs is the use of narrative, drama and non-scientific laboratory experimentation to open business and community minds to the constructed regional advantages of innovation. The theoretical context is ‘post-cluster’ hence platform-minded and using matrix models to induce innovation through stimulating cross-cluster ‘transversality’.

Suggested Citation

  • Philip Cooke, 2012. "The Increasing Use of Dramaturgy in Regional Innovation Practice," Springer Books, in: Helinä Melkas & Vesa Harmaakorpi (ed.), Practice-Based Innovation: Insights, Applications and Policy Implications, chapter 0, pages 277-301, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-642-21723-4_15
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-21723-4_15
    as

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