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Structure and strategy for regional learning and innovation

Structure and strategy for regional learning and innovation. Professor Jørgen Amdam Volda University College 2012. Jørgen Amdam. Professor of regional planning and development Volda University College +3000 students Education for the public sector and mass communication

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Structure and strategy for regional learning and innovation

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  1. Structure and strategy for regional learning and innovation Professor Jørgen Amdam Volda University College 2012

  2. Jørgen Amdam • Professor of regional planning and development • Volda University College +3000 students • Education for the public sector and mass communication • Volda – 8000 inh. – higher education for over 100 years.

  3. Endring i folketal 2006 – 2011 5 km rute Lokal og regional konsentrasjon - 4% -3 til +3 + 4%

  4. Innflytting Utflytting Wicken Industrialisation: English French

  5. CONTEXT SITUATION

  6. John Friedmann, 1992: Empowerment

  7. FRAGMENTATION

  8. Talk Trust Storper 1997: The Regional World

  9. Trippel Helix Scandinavian Model Industries Public activity Research and Education

  10. Industry Sivil Society Public Activity Research and Education

  11. The successful regions have a rich organisational life, the inhabitants take responsibility, there is good and open communication between key social actors, the political organisations and institutions enjoy popular support and they work for their region locally, regionally, nationally and internationally and in relation to sectors and organisations Egalitarian "independence culture” Regions that function poorly are characterised by "hierarchy" and "power centralisation", i.e. elites and routines have been established that are more concerned with controlling and restricting initiatives. The "third sector" (the civil society) is poorly developed and there is poor communication and co-operation between political bodies, market institutions and the "third sector”.A "wage earner culture" with class conflicts The civil society and business and industrial development

  12. Internationalisation Market concentration Changes in patterns - from production to production-oriented services Market organisation of public activities Competition between regions The communicative society Recruitment of leaders and specialists New demands on regional communities as “total communities Business Challenges

  13. LINEAR INNOVATION Research Research Engineering Engineering Production Production Market DYNAMIC INNOVATION Market

  14. Ship building Møre and Romsdal Design – profit 50% Equipment – profit 20% Ship building – profit 2%

  15. Partners in innovation(INU- bedriftene) 1= svært viktig, 2= viktig, 3=Ikkje viktig 1= very important, 2= important 3= =

  16. Regions with a positive development have high internal powers of change, a high degree of open flow of knowledge between actors and a long tradition of growth (Nilsson 1998), often such that growth in some industries compensates for decline in others. The growth of new know-ledge and competence comes in the form of self-development in existing businesses and environ-ments, the transfer of knowledge between industries and companies, a high rate of establishing new companies based on knowledge and through the recruitment of young, well-qualified people. Regional business and industry and challenges of knowledge

  17. Public competence activity and its connection with significance for innovations in regional business and industry • Do university and research environments result in the establishment of companies and the development of business and industry? • Is education and research activity important for regional social and industrial development? • Is investment in special programmes the solution for building innovative competence in business and industry? • Is the sector organisation in the public sector an obstacle to regional innovation?

  18. R&E and Industry Cooperation • Education – 90 % of regional students work related BA-studies is at work in the region 3 year after exams. • Practice in Industries • Projects – 50 % Public founding – VRI • Marine – animation +++ • Networks

  19. Ålesund Knowledge Park Norwegian Maritime Competence Center Rolls-Royce Regional Companies OFFSHORE SIMULATOR CENTER

  20. Befolknings- og sysselsettingsutvikling med 2004 som referansepunkt, busette i Eiksundregionen. Employment Population

  21. Eiksundregionen – folketalsendring, fødselsoverskot og nettoflytting.

  22. Emigration International National

  23. Is it possible to have common networks, or Specific networks related to activities and responsibilities? Who can be major stakeholders and why? Network Challenges INDUSTRY Local Communities NGO R&E Agencies, Public act.

  24. Dialogue, trust and partnership ‑ strategies for the development of regional competence Knowledge Relational Mobilisation

  25. Strategies: • Production of knowledge that is related to the region itself, to the business and industrial situation in the area - increase knowledge capital • The capture and sieving of external knowledge that can help to increase the capability to meet new challenges and to implement changes - increase relational capital • The linking of internal knowledge production and the grasping of knowledge externally into joint learning processes which further the development of the region as a special area - mobilise

  26. This requires of regional public and private actors: • Acceptance of long‑term development structures and strategies, and binding co-operation to achieve change and improve quality • Acceptance of an active involvement that aims to change the working methods of each individual actor, and the working methods of co-operating actors, in order to establish a total system that functions better.

  27. Tilbaketrekking Fragmentering Lokalt valt utvikling og omstilling

  28. Challenges to be met in regional development • Integrated national strategy to co-ordinate among other things educational, industrial and labour market policy is necessary. • Domain defences have to be dismantled, and innovation is needed that leads to the release of resources. • The centralised building of institutions leads to systems failure, that can only be repaired through local institutions and initiatives, and active learning processes at all levels. This requires an active development programme led and initiated from the bottom upwards and a more integrated national allocation system.

  29. What stimulates and prevents regionally initiated development • Entrepreneurs - collective and privatekey individuals • Networks and arenas • External threats • High local mobility of relevant knowledge and information • Local identity

  30. Proactive work involves systematic differential treatment in order to reach concrete goals

  31. “Total” integration, is characterised by Cornett in Bengs (2002) • The development of specific geographically defined systems of production such as industrial districts, clusters of industries, or systems of innovation. • A system of urban networks defined according to specific functional links. • The availability of a relevant regional infrastructure linking the analysed areas together. • Last but not least, the intensity of intra-regional flows relative to outside flows can be considered the “conditio sine non quo” when we talk of a spatially integrated area.

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