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Young men choosing a traditional working career 189 Young women
making modern choices 191 The struggles of young men versus the
success of young women 192 CONCLUSIONS Changing economies, changing
households 195 Jane Wheelock and Age Mariussen Summing up 195
Institutional comparisons: empirical analysis 197 Theoretical
implications 201 Policy implications 204 Bibliography 207 Index 231
ix ILLUSTRATIONS Figures 1. 1 Institutional change as a theme in
economics and sociology 15 1. 2 The household in the total economy
28 2. 1 The household in the production, reproduction and
consumption cloverleaf 39 10. 1 Characteristics of the two extreme
groups of farmers, 'sceptics' and 'radicals' 155 11. 1 Flexibility
in the family economic unit 161 Tables ILl Changing employment
structure in Wearside and Mo i Rana, selected years 67 11. 2
Employment change comparisons, Wearside!Great Britain and Mo i
Rana/Norway, selected years 68 11. 3 Major industrial sectors,
Wearside and Mo i Rana, selected years 69 11. 4 Employment in
Wearside and Mo i Rana: gender and part-time! full-time breakdown,
selected years 70 The degree of change in the organisation of
household work 7. 1 116 Economic status categories and family
succession 10. 1 150 12. 1 Economic position of young adults
(16-29) in Newcastle 176 12.
There is a broad and long-standing debate on possible solutions to
the regional vulnerabilities of globalisation. In 2014, the
European Commission began implementing Smart Specialisation
Strategy, a place-based strategy of growth, regional transformation
and new industrial policy with collective entrepreneurial discovery
processes (EDP) at its core. This volume approaches the mystery of
entrepreneurial discovery; that is, how relevant knowledge is
created, converted and shared in a process of discovery. These
essays bring together scholars from economics, geography,
sociology, organisation studies, innovation studies, and complexity
theory, offering new approaches to overcome the limitations of
place-based development and suggesting improved methods leading to
growth.
Systems of innovation that are conducted within national borders
can preserve inefficient solutions and prevent development. This
has led to a feeling that transnational learning strategies are
more and more desirable. In practice, the field of transnational
learning has been dominated by various policy-making institutions,
such as the OECD and European Union, working through different
types of policy instruments and programs such as structural funds,
open methods of coordination, as well as international research
institutions and networks set up by cooperating national
governments working on comparative analysis, benchmarking and
indicators. This book lays out a set of methods which can further
enhance the experience of transnational learning, starting from the
sociological ideas promoted by Charles Sabel of learning through
monitoring, and by Marie Laure Djelic and others of the
"translation" of experiences between different countries. Case
studies and examples are collected from three fields: industrial
development, tourism and local government.
There is a broad and long-standing debate on possible solutions to
the regional vulnerabilities of globalisation. In 2014, the
European Commission began implementing Smart Specialisation
Strategy, a place-based strategy of growth, regional transformation
and new industrial policy with collective entrepreneurial discovery
processes (EDP) at its core. This volume approaches the mystery of
entrepreneurial discovery; that is, how relevant knowledge is
created, converted and shared in a process of discovery. These
essays bring together scholars from economics, geography,
sociology, organisation studies, innovation studies, and complexity
theory, offering new approaches to overcome the limitations of
place-based development and suggesting improved methods leading to
growth.
Young men choosing a traditional working career 189 Young women
making modern choices 191 The struggles of young men versus the
success of young women 192 CONCLUSIONS Changing economies, changing
households 195 Jane Wheelock and Age Mariussen Summing up 195
Institutional comparisons: empirical analysis 197 Theoretical
implications 201 Policy implications 204 Bibliography 207 Index 231
ix ILLUSTRATIONS Figures 1. 1 Institutional change as a theme in
economics and sociology 15 1. 2 The household in the total economy
28 2. 1 The household in the production, reproduction and
consumption cloverleaf 39 10. 1 Characteristics of the two extreme
groups of farmers, 'sceptics' and 'radicals' 155 11. 1 Flexibility
in the family economic unit 161 Tables ILl Changing employment
structure in Wearside and Mo i Rana, selected years 67 11. 2
Employment change comparisons, Wearside!Great Britain and Mo i
Rana/Norway, selected years 68 11. 3 Major industrial sectors,
Wearside and Mo i Rana, selected years 69 11. 4 Employment in
Wearside and Mo i Rana: gender and part-time! full-time breakdown,
selected years 70 The degree of change in the organisation of
household work 7. 1 116 Economic status categories and family
succession 10. 1 150 12. 1 Economic position of young adults
(16-29) in Newcastle 176 12.
Systems of innovation that are conducted within national borders
can preserve inefficient solutions and prevent development. This
has led to a feeling that transnational learning strategies are
more and more desirable. In practice, the field of transnational
learning has been dominated by various policy-making institutions,
such as the OECD and European Union, working through different
types of policy instruments and programs such as structural funds,
open methods of coordination, as well as international research
institutions and networks set up by cooperating national
governments working on comparative analysis, benchmarking and
indicators. This book lays out a set of methods which can further
enhance the experience of transnational learning, starting from the
sociological ideas promoted by Charles Sabel of learning through
monitoring, and by Marie Laure Djelic and others of the
"translation" of experiences between different countries. Case
studies and examples are collected from three fields: industrial
development, tourism and local government.
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