Technological innovations and sectoral change: Transformative capacity, adaptability, patterns of change: An analytical framework
Following up on recent debates about sectoral systems of innovation and production, the paper introduces a heuristic framework for analyzing and explaining distinct patterns of technology-based sectoral change. The concept is based on two interrelated influencing factors. The first is the sectoral-specific transformative capacity of new technologies themselves, that is, their substantial or incremental impact on socioeconomic and institutional change in a given sectoral system. The second is the sectoral adaptability of socioeconomic structures, institutions, and actors confronted with the opportunities presented by new technologies. The first factor--the sectoral transformative capacity of new technologies--enables us to identify the technology-based pressure to change and adjust the structural, institutional, and organizational architectures of the sectoral system. The second, complementary factor--sectoral adaptability--helps us to discern the distinct social patterns of anticipating and adopting this technology-based pressure. The specific interplay between the two influencing factors creates distinguishable modes of sectoral transformation, ranging from anticipative and smooth adjustments to reactive and crisis-ridden patterns of change. Even processes of radical sectoral change continue over longer periods of mismatch and are characterized by numerous and mostly gradual organizational, structural and institutional transformations.
Year of publication: |
2009
|
---|---|
Authors: | Dolata, Ulrich |
Published in: |
Research Policy. - Elsevier, ISSN 0048-7333. - Vol. 38.2009, 6, p. 1066-1076
|
Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Sectoral innovation systems Organizational and institutional change Socio-technical transitions Path-dependency Innovation theory |
Saved in:
Online Resource
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Dolata, Ulrich, (2007)
-
Dolata, Ulrich, (2008)
-
Dolata, Ulrich, (2008)
- More ...