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What can we learn from the failures of technology and innovation policies in the European periphery? created by George Liagouras

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: European Urban and Regional Studies ; Volume 17, number 3Los Angeles: sage, 2010Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISSN:
  • 14617145
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HT395 EUR
Online resources: Abstract: This paper examines the technology policy challenges facing peripheral European Union economies in their effort to catch up with the more advanced countries. It is argued that, generally, the subordinate position of peripheral economies within the EU compels them to replicate the technology policies followed in advanced countries. Yet the latter have proven more or less inappropriate for peripheral countries and regions because they usually do not properly accommodate their growth models and their corresponding production structures. On the other hand, the EU’s preoccupation with ‘high-tech’ and ‘best-practice’ policies can be attributed to the underestimation of business organization and broader economic structures by the dominant theoretical paradigm of technology and innovation.
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This paper examines the technology policy challenges facing peripheral European Union economies in their effort to catch up with the more advanced countries. It is argued that, generally, the subordinate position of peripheral economies within the EU compels them to replicate the technology policies followed in advanced countries. Yet the latter have proven more or less inappropriate for peripheral countries and regions because they usually do not properly accommodate their growth models and their corresponding production structures. On the other hand, the EU’s preoccupation with ‘high-tech’ and ‘best-practice’ policies can be attributed to the underestimation of business organization and broader economic structures by the dominant theoretical paradigm of technology and innovation.

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