IW Homepage Web Watch Resources Web Links Thought Leaders Site Search Contact Us
About Newsletter Contributors Multimedia Clips Futurepedia Podcast David Forrest's Blog
Join the Innovation Watch community... read and post in our online forums (coming soon) Innovation Forums
   Books on Creativity and Innovation -
   The Innovation System
 HOME
 Resources
 Creativity and
 Innovation
 
 The Innovation
 System
 The Innovation
 Process
 Innovation in
 Technology
 Innovation in
 Business
 Innovation
 in the Economy
 Innovation in
 Society
 Creative
 Archetypes
 Creative
 Intelligence
 Creativity Tools
 and Techniques

Cluster Genesis: Technology-Based Industrial Development
by Pontus Braunerhjelm and Maryann Feldman, eds.

New York: Oxford University Press, 2006

Clusters – regional concentrations of related firms and organizations – are seen as being an important element of economic growth innovation. But there is little understanding of how clusters come into existence, and little guidance provided on the role of policies that are conducive to the formation of clusters.
Cluster Genesis focuses on these early origins of clusters. The case histories of well-known, established clusters, as well as more recently-developed clusters are discussed, including:

  • The Hollywood motion picture cluster,
  • Silicon Valley,
  • Boston and San Francisco biotech regions,
  • The Biotech industry in China,
  • Medicon Valley in Scandinavia,
  • The Irish ITC sector.

Leading scholars contribute chapters examining cluster genesis, the divergent processes by which clusters arise, how multinationals contribute to cluster development, and how economic development policy may promote or hinder cluster genesis.

Cluster Genesis uses a variety of methodological perspectives, examines a range of policy options, and draws on a number of rich case histories, and will be key reading for academics, researchers, and students of Economics, Sociology, Geography, and Management Studies, as well as economic development officials and policy makers.

Pontus Braunerhjelm earned his Ph.D. at the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva, Switzerland, in 1994. His research centers around issues related to entrepreneurship, knowledge, localization and industrial dynamics and growth. He has published extensively in journals and also contributed to several books internationally published. In 2000 he participated in the CEPR Monitoring European Integration report (with co-authors R. Faini, V. Norman, F. Ruane and P. Seabright). Pontus Braunerhjelm is presently heading two larger research projects:  One on endogenous growth and entrepreneurship and the other on microeconomic dynamics within Europe. He has been a regular participant in the ‘wise men’ group of economists that annually evaluates the Swedish economy and presents policy recommendations (SNS Economic Policy Group). Presently Pontus Brauerhjelm holds Leif Lundbad’s chair in international business and entrepreneurship at The Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden.

Maryann Feldman is the Jeffrey S. Skoll Chair in Technical Innovation and Entrepreneurship and Professor of Business Economics at the Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto. Prior to joining Rotman, Dr. Feldman held the position of Policy Director for Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering and prior to that she was a research scientist at the Institute on Policy Studies at the University. Dr. Feldman is on the Advisory Panel for the U.S. National Science Foundation’s Program on Societal Dimensions of Engineering, Science and Technology. Her research and teaching interests focus on the areas of innovation, the commercialization of academic research and the factors that promote technological change and economic growth. A large part of Dr. Feldman’s work concerns the geography of innovation – investigating the reasons why innovation clusters spatially and the mechanisms that support and sustain industrial clusters.

 

 
   
IW Homepage | Web Watch | Resources | Web Links | Thought Leaders | Site Search | Contact Us
About | Newsletter | Contributors | Multimedia Clips | Futurepedia | Podcast | David Forrest's Blog
Join the Innovation Watch community... read and post in our online forms: Innovation Forums
Send mail to mail (at) innovationwatch.com with questions or comments about this site.
Copyright © 2001-2008. Innovation Watch is a registered trademark.