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(Received: March 2018; Accepted: May 2018)
Abstract: In the past decades the preoccupation of decision-makers towards innovation and sustainable development has gained a major importance in the policy of most countries in Europe. On one hand, efficient innovation can differentiate a country or a region from another and make a difference in the intense increasing economic, technological and social competition. On the other hand, the orientation towards sustainable development assures a clean and unpolluted, social oriented and healthy environment as a framework for the growth of a country or a region. In many cases, innovation and sustainable development go hand in hand, as innovations contribute to the development of clean technologies, while sustainable societies assure the proper environment and background for stimulating the innovation research. The objective of this research is to determine the cluster of countries in Europe which are rather oriented to innovation or to sustainable development or both and to forecast their future developments and tendencies. In order to achieve this objective, the multivariate cluster analysis was applied with the help of the SPSS program, for data provided by the Eurostat for several innovation, sustainable development and contextual indicators. In a first step, for each of the analyzed countries, the values of the indicators have been collected for the same period and the correlations among them have been determined. In the second phase the number of clusters and the cluster membership of each country was determined, by running the Ward cluster analysis. Based on the results, the characteristics of each cluster of countries was defined.
Key words: sustainable development, innovation, cluster analysis, regional development.
JEL CLASSIFICATION: O30, Q01.
(ProQuest: ... denotes formulae omitted.)
1. Introduction
Although sustainable development has been a key interest point since the Brundtland Commission in 1987, global challenges still need to be tackled (Hutt, 2016). In September 2015, a new set of sustainable development goals was adopted by UN Member States, which can be managed by both developed and developing countries (UN General Assembly, 2015). In order to manage sustainable development, the European Council has adopted a strategy in Gothenburg in 2001, which was renewed in June 2006. The strategy has established several directions such as climate change and clean energy, sustainable transport, sustainable consumption and production,...