Content area

Abstract

This study identifies the conditions that, at a regional level, facilitate the emergence of technological and non-technological innovation. One of the most promising lines in the discussion of the processes of regional innovation lies in explaining the different conditions of the various forms innovation process can take. We use fsQCA methodology to test the model. QCA is a method based on set theory that assumes the influence of certain elements in a specific outcome that depend on the combination of those elements; not just on the levels of the individual elements, as in traditional methods. First, we found that the absence of a single condition appears limiting for both types of innovation, which calls for customized innovation policies tailored to the regional context. Second, we found that some sets of innovation characteristics are sufficient conditions for regions to innovate. Among the selected sets, we found that the combination of firm collaboration and public and private R&D are sufficient for both types of innovation, which should be informative for regional policy. The fsQCA also identified alternative pathways--different for both types of innovation. Collaboration seems to be relevant since it is present in all the configurations for sufficient conditions.

Details

Title
Technological innovation versus non-technological innovation: different conditions in different regional contexts?
Author
García Álvarez-coque, José María 1 ; Mas-verdú, Francisco 1 ; Roig-tierno, Norat 2 

 Universitat Politècnica de València, Valencia, Spain 
 ESIC Business and Marketing School, Valencia, Spain 
Pages
1955-1967
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Sep 2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
00335177
e-ISSN
15737845
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1929388507
Copyright
Quality & Quantity is a copyright of Springer, 2017.