We study the role division between public and private actors in their search for sustainable innovation of industrial clusters. This search unfolds as a two-phase process. In the first phase, private parties develop different projects for sustainable innovation independently from each other. Without coordination, a common ground for the projects emerges. Through their involvement in several of these projects, public actors are able to take up a central place between the projects and their associated actor coalitions. From this position, they are able to act on the common ground, and mobilize other actors for collaboration. The common ground is translated to a vision, and the private projects are assembled into a program, in which synergetic connections between the different projects are established. This starts the second phase of the process, in which a regional collaboration unfolds, coordinated by the public actors. Thus, the crucial role of private actors is to create the building blocks for sustainable innovation in the early stages of the process. The public actors are crucial in acting on these private initiatives, assembling the building blocks into programmatic effort towards sustainable innovation of industrial clusters. The main strength of public actors lies in their betweenness centrality. |
Zoekresultaat: 24 artikelen
Jaar 2016 xArtikel |
Duurzame innovatie in industriële clustersRollenspel tussen ondernemers en publieke assembleurs |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 4 2016 |
Trefwoorden | innovation, government, collaboration, industrial clusters |
Auteurs | Wouter Spekkink, Geert R. Teisman en Frank A.A. Boons |
Samenvatting |
Artikel |
Innovaties en overheden: een slecht huwelijk of een vruchtbaar rollenspel? |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 4 2016 |
Auteurs | Prof.dr. Albert Meijer, Prof.dr.ing Geert Teisman en Dr. Haiko van der Voort |
Artikel |
Van project naar opgaveSamenwerking als motor van de planning van infrastructuur en ruimte |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 4 2016 |
Trefwoorden | planning, cooperation, challenge-oriented approach, infrastructure and spatial development |
Auteurs | Wim Leendertse, Jos Arts, Tim Busscher e.a. |
Samenvatting |
Infrastructure and adjacent areas represent extensive social value. However, infrastructure and areas are still often developed sectoral and independent. In the Netherlands, national spatial policies strive for combining infrastructure and area as one integrated approach as this is expected to result in more spatial quality. Taking this perspective, this article discusses trendy concepts in current Dutch planning, such as: adaptive planning, public and private cooperation and challenge-oriented approaches (‘opgave-gericht werken’ which focuses less on realising a project but more on the current and future issues and challenges in an area). This article argues that these concepts are closely related. Adaptive planning defines the rules of the game and the playing field, within which cooperation may develop. Cooperation is a means for creating spatial quality in interaction within this playing field. After all, generated quality can be considered as a contribution to the specific objectives and interest of the various partners. A challenge-oriented approach is the process for generating spatial quality from synergies in combined infrastructure and spatial development. This article aims to explore the relationships between adaptive planning, public and private cooperation and challenge-oriented approaches and to provide starting points for further research and discussion. |
Artikel |
Overheden niet goed in innovatie?Empirische verkenningen van een ‘innovatiedilemma’ |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 4 2016 |
Trefwoorden | government, innovation, public values, dilemma |
Auteurs | Prof.dr.ing Geert Teisman, Dr. Haiko van der Voort en Prof.dr. Albert Meijer |
Samenvatting |
This contribution contains a summary and a conclusion of the special issue ‘Innovation and government: a bad marriage or a fertile relation’. Innovation is said to be not the core quality of government. However, we found that government is actually good in innovation, albeit not in an obvious way. Government has a complex position when it comes to innovation. Sometimes innovation may be seen as a public value. However, innovation usually also involves conflict with other public values that civilians expect government to secure. This the innovation dilemma is that government ought to be both favour and innovation and fight its negative consequences to other public values. The four contributions show how governments deal with this dilemma. They first move along with the innovation and then redefine their positions by for instance developing new instruments, bundling private initiatives or framing private initiatives to large programmes. |
Artikel |
Participant of databron?Burgers als extensie van stedelijk innovatievermogen |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 4 2016 |
Trefwoorden | data-driven innovation, cities, public participation, user innovation |
Auteurs | Albert Meijer, Zsuzsanna Tomor, Ank Michels e.a. |
Samenvatting |
In the private sector, user innovation is used to develop innovations that better fit the needs of customers. In the public sector, interest for citizen innovation is also on the rise and new information and communication technologies seem to offer a great potential for accessing the power of citizens. At the same time these technologies offer another potential value: they can turn citizens into data sources. This data can offer governments crucial insights and may form the basis for datadriven innovation. Innovating with citizens in both different ways seems to offer great potential for broadly supported issues such as urban sustainability. This article develops a framework for studying these new developments and presents explorative research in three cities (Curitiba, Glasgow en Utrecht). The research shows that cities make different choices in their use of new technologies to innovate with or for citizens. |
Artikel |
Waarden borgen, praktijken innoverenHoe pilots bijdragen aan een andere kijk op waterveiligheid |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 4 2016 |
Trefwoorden | Flood Risk Management, Pilot, Learning evaluation, Path dependency, Policy innovation |
Auteurs | Prof. dr. Arwin van Buuren en Gerald Jan Ellen Msc. |
Samenvatting |
In The Netherlands an innovative water safety policy is under development: multi-layered safety. This innovation is a move from a preventive approach (levees) towards a risk approach. Mitigation of consequences for spatial measures and disaster management too are considered in reducing flood risks. The theory of path dependence teaches us that many technical, financial and institutional factors keep the current policy system in its equilibrium. This complicates policy innovations. This article contains a case study that explains how pilots contribute to a process of policy innovation. It concludes that enshrining results in the ‘home organizations’ and synchronizing pilots with running policy processes is essential. The pilots also show that policy renewal concerns a process of ‘muddling through intelligently’. |
Artikel |
Welvaart gemeten, verdeeld en verduurzaamd |
Tijdschrift | Beleid en Maatschappij, Aflevering 4 2016 |
Trefwoorden | Welfare economics, Asymmetrical information, Situational contracting, Political theory, Behaviourism |
Auteurs | Prof. dr. Dik Wolfson |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This paper shows how interactive governance can be helpful in dealing with information asymmetries in the design and administration of public policy. It describes the checks and balances of a properly incentivized mechanism design of contextual or situational contracting that reveals information on diversity in demand for public intervention, deals with complexity, creates commitment to the public cause and disciplines uncooperative behavior. The contractual mode, moreover, discloses the actual trade-offs between rivalling criteria of good governance such as individual freedom, efficiency, distributional concerns and sustainability, deepening our insight in who gets – or pays for – what, when, where, how and why, as the key issues of policy analysis. Evidence from early applications is combined with suggestions for rolling out this new mode of relinking public policy, implementation and external control. |
Artikel |
|
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Trefwoorden | Public management, 21st century skills, Megatrends, Strategic HRM, Public managers |
Auteurs | Zeger van der Wal |
Samenvatting |
This article examines who ‘21st century public managers’ are and which skills and roles they have to master to function effectively in the 21st century. Based on a large scale analysis of literature and years of interaction with senior practitioners, seven key 21st century demands for public managers are identified, each of which creates dilemmas as well as opportunities. 21st century public managers utilize a combination of traditional and new roles, competencies, and values to turn demands into opportunities. The article concludes with implications for public administration research and education. |
Artikel |
Technisch duwtje in de rug, maar in welke richting? |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Trefwoorden | nudging, persuasive technology, responsible innovation, feedback |
Auteurs | Dr. Iris Korthagen en Jelte Timmer MA |
Samenvatting |
Technology is increasingly being used to change people’s behavior. Such persuasive technologies can be understood as a cybernetic loop: data about the individual is collected and analyzed and, via feedback mechanisms, the technology exerts influence on the behavior of the individual. In practice, we see persuasive technology in various applications. This article discusses how persuasive technology can be responsibly implemented in a collective context, on the basis of two emerging practices: smart energy meters and fitness tracking. The cases reveal the tensions between corporate, commercial and individual interests. Due to datafication, a strong reduction is taking place in terms of what the smart meter defines as sustainable behavior and the fitness trackers understand to be healthy behavior. Each step in the process of technological persuasion (collecting, analyzing, providing feedback) presents its own challenges, which urges policy makers to reflect on preconditions for responsible persuasion. |
Artikel |
Decentrale overheden en beleidsinnovaties ter ondersteuning van actief burgerschap in de productie van lokaal opgewekte duurzame energie |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurs­wetenschappen, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Auteurs | Beau Warbroek MSc en Dr. Thomas Hoppe |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Local authorities know for some time from experience with partnerships with local communities in the area of sustainable development that the urgency of climate change increases and that citizens develop into an equal partner. The convergence of these two motivations asks for an innovative way of acting, in which the performance of local authorities is a crucial factor for the ultimate success of local sustainable energy projects in which citizens are actively involved or will be involved. This article exposes the ways in which local authorities innovate with policy for the support of active citizenship in the production of locally generated sustainable energy. The article also explores the barriers that arise. The authors analyse two cases on different levels of government; ‘The Energy-workplace’ (in the Dutch province Fryslân) and ‘The Armhoede sustainable energy landscape’ (in the Dutch municipality Lochem). The cases show that policy innovations crystallize as well at ‘arm’s length’ distance as in the direct sphere of influence of the (local) authority. However, innovation takes place by the grace of the space in the existing institutional framework and the political (and administrative) system. Formal guidelines (like policy or regulation), persons, and informal practices of the traditional policy implementation may hinder a productive interaction between (active) citizens and government. |
Artikel |
Inleiding themanummer ‘Energietransitie en lokaal bestuur’ |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurs­wetenschappen, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Auteurs | Thomas Hoppe, Ellen van Bueren en Maurits Sanders |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This special issue contains five articles based on empirical research into energy transition at the local level. The focus is on the role of local authorities in the energy transition and on partnerships between local authorities (municipalities, provinces, regions) and local communities in the area of sustainable development. The three guest editors have also written an introduction and conclusion for this special issue. |
Artikel |
Polycentrisme in lokale besluitvorming over duurzame energie: de casus slimme netten |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurs­wetenschappen, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Auteurs | Imke Lammers MSc en Dr. Maarten Arentsen |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Energy planning and the realization of a new energetic infrastructure has become an issue for many actors. The local setting has become polycentric. Against this background the authors have tried to answer the question of the possible consequences of a polycentric local decision-making arena for the realization of sustainable energy transition, especially the implementation of smart grids. Polycentrism is characterised by configurations of units that are multi-level, multi-purpose, multi-sectoral and multi-functional. The impact of these configurations can be assessed using four criteria: control, efficiency, political representation and local self-determination. The authors used these criteria to analyse two cases. Both cases show that the consequences of polycentrism are variable and differ on the four criteria. The analysis shows tensions in polycentric configurations between control and efficiency on the one hand and local self-determination and political representation on the other. This outcome was a reason for the authors to argue for a better institutional design for the local polycentric arena with the help of the seven ‘rules-in-use’ of Elinor Ostrom. Her design is universal but requires specific local application. In this way more justice can be done to the local circumstances in order to be able to achieve effective results. |
Artikel |
De slag om duurzaamheid in de polycentrische regio’s Randstad en Rijn-Roergebied |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurs­wetenschappen, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Auteurs | Simon Goess MSc, Prof. dr. Ellen van Bueren en Prof. dr. Martin de Jong |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In polycentric urban regions one can find different, mutually related cities without a clear centre. In these regions cities cooperate to attract inhabitants and employment, but at the same time they are each other’s competitors. The Randstad (Netherlands) and the Rhine-Ruhr area (Germany) both can be seen as polycentric regions. The authors explore to what extent these regions possess a common identity and common agenda and to what extent this promotes the sustainability and energy transition of these regions. In both regions identity appears to have grown especially at subregional level, by historically developed spatial-economic profiles of the different cities or suburban regions. In addition the cities in these regions more and more wish to distinguish themselves in the area of sustainability. Every city wants to be the smartest, greenest and healthiest, and to be at the forefront in energy transition and climate mitigation. In the Dutch Randstad this competitive drive especially seems to contribute to the realization of sustainability projects at the local level. And that is exactly why regional cooperation is important: to allocate resources as well as possible and to avoid transfer to others. This can be improved by the development of subregional or regional sustainability visions. |
Artikel |
Oog voor succes: een pleidooi voor positieve beleidsevaluatie |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 2 2016 |
Trefwoorden | public policy, evaluation, success, accountability, learning |
Auteurs | Dr. Peter van der Knaap en Dr. Rudi Turksema |
Samenvatting |
One of the classic issues in literature on policy evaluation is that of utilization: how can we make sure the results of evaluative inquiry are used more and better? Traditionally, the answer to this question is often searched in improvement of evaluation quality (accuracy, reliability, independence of the researcher) or evaluation processes (more interaction and responsiveness). Although these are and remain crucial elements for any evaluation, the focus remains on the supply side of evaluation. The psychological insight that people tend to learn more from positive feedback and success is not taken into account. |
Artikel |
Beleidsevaluatie, kennis en politiek: nieuw optimisme rond klassieke paradoxen |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 2 2016 |
Auteurs | Dr. Peter van der Knaap en Dr. Valérie Pattyn |
Artikel |
Probleemanalyse is het halve werkSamenwerking en innovatie in de strijd tegen ondermijnende criminaliteit |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurs­wetenschappen, Aflevering 2 2016 |
Auteurs | Maurits Waardenburg BSc, Bas Keijser BSc, Prof. dr. Martijn Groenleer e.a. |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Science and practice are largely agreed on the importance of interorganizational cooperation in the approach of tackling complex societal problems. Organization transcending innovation through this type of cooperation however appears to be complicated. Based on an analysis of the literature about partnerships, the authors distinguish three challenges: coping with the tension between old and new accountability structures, building good working relationships and developing capabilities for problem-oriented working. Starting from these insights they designed action research into problem-oriented partnerships in the safety domain (safety chain). Their main question was: what is the most important obstacle for innovation through problem-oriented interorganizational cooperation? Over a period of nine months, they watched eight teams of professionals from different organizations. Their task was to develop and implement innovative approaches to tackle persistent organized crime. Although all three challenges identified in the literature indeed played a prominent role, problem diagnosis and problem definition appeared to be the main obstacle for the teams. In this article the authors describe the action research and explore, on the basis of the results and the literature, how partnerships could cope in practice with the challenge of problem definition and problem analysis. They conclude the article with suggestions for the design of a follow-up round of the action research. |
Artikel |
Robots en arbeid: technologisch determinisme revisited? |
Tijdschrift | Beleid en Maatschappij, Aflevering 2 2016 |
Trefwoorden | Robots, technological determinism, organizational choice, new technology, technological unemployment |
Auteurs | Dr. Fabian Dekker |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In today’s debate on the impact of new technology on employment, many fear that robots will substitute human labour. Due to increased exposure to market pressure and the decline in union power, the adoption of new technology at the workplace is perceived as an inevitable course in order to remain competitive. This rejects the basic principles behind organizational choice theory: the idea that technology is shaped by social agency. Analysis of qualitative data from 23 in-depth interviews in two sectors of the Dutch economy shows that the use of robotics at the workplace is far more limited than anticipated. |
Casus |
Het CPB waait met de tijdgeest mee |
Tijdschrift | Beleid en Maatschappij, Aflevering 2 2016 |
Auteurs | Dr. Alfred Kleinknecht |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In this feature authors discuss recent research findings that are of interest to readers of Beleid en Maatschappij. |
Artikel |
Van kaas naar big dataData science Alkmaar, het living lab van Noord-Holland Noord |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 1 2016 |
Trefwoorden | big data, innovation, data-driven societies, data science, smart cities |
Auteurs | Dr. Ir. Martijn van Otterlo en Prof. dr. Frans Feldberg |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Big data can be seen as vital fuel for the innovation of diverse processes in both companies and in government policies and practices. In this short article we describe local efforts in the region around the Dutch city of Alkmaar in which the (local) government, (local) companies and a nearby university (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) work together on data-related challenges in a typical triple-helix structure. The municipality of Alkmaar gathers activities in a physical location to stimulate interaction and cooperation among (potential) partners, and it engages in the formation of new governance structures to increase both the intensity and the regional spread of the activities around data. All this raises many new and interesting issues and challenges for public administration researchers and practitioners. |
Artikel |
Wilde data: over de sociale gevolgen van Big, Open, en Linked Data systemen |
Tijdschrift | Bestuurskunde, Aflevering 1 2016 |
Trefwoorden | BOLD, autonomic computing, social consequences technology |
Auteurs | Dr. Dhoya Snijders |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article focuses on the question how Big, Open and Linked Data systems (BOLD) are shifting human-data relations. BOLD is creating a new type of society which is both data-focused and data-driven. Both governments and citizens are measuring, analyzing and verifying data and acting upon these types of analyses. As BOLD is itself becoming intelligent, the process of collecting, linking, and analyzing data is no longer merely the domain of humans. Machine-learning is picking up speed and algorithmic accuracy is being maximized as data are becoming more complex and unpredictable its output. Both citizens and governments will increasingly have to deal with non-human actors in the form of intelligent data-driven systems. By referring to literature on human-animal relations this article makes the argument that data systems are gaining autonomy and a certain level of wildness. As such systems are mediating human relations, the article argues that social relations are shifting to becoming triad relationships in which intelligent information systems are a significant actor. |