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As the economies of western countries move from primarily
resource-based to knowledge-based, and trade liberalization limits
what governments can do through direct action, the landscape of
innovation is changing and policymakers must react accordingly.
This exciting new book examines the challenges that policy makers
face in responding to a new environment. The book addresses how
governments are now seeking to drive innovation through new forms
of R&D policies, through public procurement, skills
development, entrepreneurship and innovation culture to name but a
few of the approaches. Innovation Policy Challenges for the 21st
Century explores these and other contemporary issues in innovation,
reviewing the state of the art literature and consolidating current
thinking at the frontiers of innovation. The volume debates and
presents scattered and anonymous material in a coherent way, with a
particular focus is on 'hot topics' in the field of innovation
studies that have been previously under-researched. The book is
divided into four key themes: government as a key actor in the
innovation process, entrepreneurs as innovators, skills and
competences required to maintain and improve innovation performance
in Europe and finally, the wider context in which innovation policy
develops.
As the economies of western countries move from primarily
resource-based to knowledge-based, and trade liberalization limits
what governments can do through direct action, the landscape of
innovation is changing and policymakers must react accordingly.
This exciting new book examines the challenges that policy makers
face in responding to a new environment. The book addresses how
governments are now seeking to drive innovation through new forms
of R&D policies, through public procurement, skills
development, entrepreneurship and innovation culture to name but a
few of the approaches.
Innovation Policy Challenges for the 21st Century explores these
and other contemporary issues in innovation, reviewing the state of
the art literature and consolidating current thinking at the
frontiers of innovation. The volume debates and presents scattered
and anonymous material in a coherent way, with a particular focus
is on hot topics in the field of innovation studies that have been
previously under-researched. The book is divided into four key
themes: government as a key actor in the innovation process,
entrepreneurs as innovators, skills and competences required to
maintain and improve innovation performance in Europe and finally,
the wider context in which innovation policy develops.
When the future of his family's rope business in Liverpool was
threatened at the end of the 1920s Eric Rigby-Jones had to leave
his wife and young family behind to risk everything on establishing
a new factory in the Irish Free State. He was still an officer in
the Territorial Army when he leased a former British cavalry
barracks in co. Kildare from the Irish government in 1933. It had
lain derelict since the departure of British troops in 1922. Within
four years his company, Irish Ropes, was supplying nearly all of
Ireland's rope. When war came in 1939 Ireland remained staunchly
neutral and faced both German invasion and a British trade embargo.
With the government determined to make the country self-sufficient
Eric had to resort to increasingly desperate measures to ensure
that Irish farmers never ran out of twine to gather the harvest.
Tintawn and Binder Twine is the untold story of the foundation and
eventual demise of an iconic Irish business, known around the world
for its Red Setter twine and Tintawn sisal carpets; of the
pioneering Englishman who founded it and introduced new concepts in
industrial relations to Ireland; of a family separated in peace and
war; and of the regeneration of an Irish town. It is also the story
of sisal, the vegetable fibre that became the mainstay of East
Africa's colonial economy, and of the first fifty years of an
independent Irish state. A member of Eric's wider family, Thomas
Jones, was secretary to the British delegation that negotiated the
Anglo-Irish treaty in 1921 and his son, Michael, was killed in the
Staines air disaster in 1972 while travelling to Brussels with an
Irish delegation for talks about the country's imminent membership
of the European Union. Well-illustrated and drawing heavily on
unpublished family letters, documents, and photographs as well as
new research in British and Irish archives, the book reveals
intriguing but little-known sides to Anglo-Irish relations during
the Second World War. It has particular relevance in today's world
of Brexit, borders, tariffs, and the bullying of small nations by
large.
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