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Summary
It is not particularly difficult to come up with long lists of
activities regarding how to promote competitiveness in clusters; there
is a body of literature on this (see, for instance, Table 1). Accordingly, any actor who wants to launch an innovation
initiative in a given cluster has at his disposal a broad menu of
possible instruments; Table
2 presents a number of them. What is somewhat less developed is
the body of literature which addresses not the question of what
to do but rather how to do it, i.e. the issue of methodologies
to secure an effective implementation of instruments.
Table 1: Common features of cluster-based policy in OECD
countries
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- Vigorous competition and regulatory reform policy
- Providing strategic information through technology foresight
studies, cluster studies, special research groups, or special
Web sites
- Broker and network agencies and schemes
- Cluster development programmes
- Joint industry-research centres of excellence
- Public procurement policy
- Institutional renewal in industrial policy making
- Providing platforms for constructive dialogue
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When looking into successful cluster-initiatives and asking for
critical success factors one often finds idiosyncratic factors –
strong leadership by some charismatic local actors, a strong sense of
community, strong personal relations between key actors, and the like.
But parachuting a charismatic leader into a cluster to start an
innovation initiative does not appear like a particularly sound
proposal – it is not exactly a methodology, and charisma is often
acquired through successful action. What comes to mind in terms of
thinking about methodologies is the whole set of participatory methods
which have been developed in fields such as community development and
which are labeled "action research", "participatory
rapid appraisal", or "participatory learning and
action". Such approaches have a number of distinct advantages:
- being participatory, they tend to be bottom-up, addressing
motivational issues as a crucial element,
- they are explicitly learning-oriented and thus superior to
traditional sequential, planning-oriented approaches,
- they are highly flexible and thus permit to include whatever
motivation and issue comes up in the process of an unfolding
cluster-based innovation initiative.
Using such instruments is not always easy, since resistance from
certain actors has to be overcome. Government officials sometimes find
the idea of participation questionable and prefer hierarchical
approaches. Researchers tend to find such approaches not sufficiently
"scientific". Nevertheless, in our work in Brazil,
stimulating local competitiveness initiatives, we have found these
approaches extremely useful.
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development
areas of
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obstacles of
cooperationpromoting
cooperationsummary
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