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Why do some countries build innovation systems that foster learning, experimentation, and technological progress, while others struggle to move beyond dependency and stagnation? This book examines this central question through a multidisciplinary lens, combining insights from innovation systems theory, institutional economics, development studies, and global political economy. It offers a comprehensive framework for understanding the systemic roots of innovation failure in emerging and transition economies. It shows how fragmented institutions, weak absorptive capacities, and short-term policy horizons create persistent barriers to learning and capability building and how these obstacles can be overcome through coordinated governance, strategic coherence, and adaptive policymaking. Drawing on real-world examples and comparative evidence, this book is appropriate for researchers, graduate students, and policymakers concerned with innovation, industrial policy, and economic transformation in developing and emerging economies.
List of contents
Chapter 1: Introduction.- Chapter 2: Understanding Innovation Failure.- Chapter 3: Bottlenecks in knowledge transfers.- Chapter 4: Weaknesses of domestic innovation systems.- Chapter 5: The role of multinational enterprises.- Chapter 6: Toward innovation sovereignty.- Chapter 7: Rethinking industrial and innovation policy for the 21st century.- Chapter 8: Inclusive innovation and a participatory future.- Chapter 9: Governing innovation in the age of uncertainty.
About the author
Nebojša Stojčić
is Professor of Economics and Rector of the University of Dubrovnik, Croatia. His research examines the dynamics of innovation, industrial upgrading, and economic transformation in emerging and transition economies, with a particular focus on Central and Eastern Europe. In addition to his academic work, he collaborated with international organizations such as the World Bank and UNIDO on the design and evaluation of innovation and industrial policies, and his studies have informed policy documents and strategic frameworks at national and international levels.
Summary
Why do some countries build innovation systems that foster learning, experimentation, and technological progress, while others struggle to move beyond dependency and stagnation? This book examines this central question through a multidisciplinary lens, combining insights from innovation systems theory, institutional economics, development studies, and global political economy. It offers a comprehensive framework for understanding the systemic roots of innovation failure in emerging and transition economies. It shows how fragmented institutions, weak absorptive capacities, and short-term policy horizons create persistent barriers to learning and capability building and how these obstacles can be overcome through coordinated governance, strategic coherence, and adaptive policymaking. Drawing on real-world examples and comparative evidence, this book is appropriate for researchers, graduate students, and policymakers concerned with innovation, industrial policy, and economic transformation in developing and emerging economies.