1st Edition

The Cultural Side of Innovation Adding Values

By Dany Jacobs Copyright 2014
    232 Pages 24 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    232 Pages 24 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    In most discussions about the knowledge-based economy, innovation is associated or even equated with technology, while culture’s influence is ignored. Innovation is however embedded in cultural and social contexts, and neglecting these crucial contexts may impede an innovation’s diffusion—and eventual success.

    This book places culture at the center of discussions on innovation, beginning with a comprehensive introduction to innovation’s various forms, including the history, sociology, and economics of innovation. Insights from marketing and psychology are integrated into a complexity theory framework, which are then utilized to evaluate case studies of organizations experiencing repeated innovation successes. The sometimes fraught relationship of firms to creativity is discussed, and a new model for to calculating the creativity of an economy is presented.

    Introduction Part 1: Building Blocks 1. The Variety of Innovation 2. Technical and Cultural Aspects of Innovation 3. Degrees of Radicalness of Innovation  4. Darwinian Selection at Different Levels Part 2: Making Innovation Succeed 5. What Constitutes Fitness in an Economic Environment 6. Mapping Selection Systems 7. Co-Evolution: From Description to Prescription 8. Innovation Routines 9. A Never Ending Dance Part 3: Bonus Track Creativity and the Economy—A Somewhat Uneasy Relationship

    Biography

    Dany Jacobs is Professor of Industrial Dynamics and Innovation Policy at the University of Amsterdam, as well as Professor of Art, Culture, and Economy at the Universities of Applied Science HAN and ArtEZ in Arnhem, the Netherlands. He is author of Mapping Strategic Diversity (2010).

    ‘This book provides us with thrilling ideas about how innovations emerge and survive. Dany Jacob’s discussion about culture and the evolution of innovations touches upon a topic that ought to be more discussed by anyone who wants’ to understand tomorrow’s knowledge economy.’ -- Bertil Rolandsson, University of Gothenberg, Sweden