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Theories and Systems Innovation

Code: 2EGIN04     Acronym: TSI

Keywords
Classification Keyword
OFICIAL Economics

Instance: 2019/2020 - 1S Ícone do Moodle

Active? Yes
Responsible unit: Agrupamento Científico de Economia
Course/CS Responsible: Master in Economics and Management of Innovation

Cycles of Study/Courses

Acronym No. of Students Study Plan Curricular Years Credits UCN Credits ECTS Contact hours Total Time
EGIN 29 Bologna Syllabus since 2012 1 - 7,5 56 202,5
Mais informaçõesLast updated on 2019-08-22.

Fields changed: Calculation formula of final grade, Componentes de Avaliação e Ocupação, Obtenção de frequência

Teaching language

Portuguese

Objectives

Theories and Systems of Innovation is a course on the economics of innovation and innovation studies, looking at innovation from micro (firms and organizations), meso (sectors and innovations systems) and macro (economies and societies) perspectives. The course will be complemented by a second semester course on Innovation Policy.

Learning outcomes and competences

When passing this course, students shall have acquired a broad and solid understand of innovation, both for research and for professional activities linked to innovation analyses and management. They shall be able to answer questions such as: What is innovation? How does it emerge and diffuses? What are their (organizational, sectoral, territorial) determinants? How does it impact in economic transformation and societal change?

Working method

Presencial

Program


  1. Innovation in the history of economic thought; concepts and taxonomies; measuring Innovation.

  2. Innovation and macroeconomic dynamics. Innovation, growth and structural change; techno-economic paradigms; catching-up and international diffusion of technology (the technological gap model).

  3. Economic fundamentals of innovation. Modern evolutionary approaches; the debate “technology-push” vs. “demand-pull”; the problems of uncertainty and appropriability; open innovation and free innovation; innovation diffusion.

  4. Innovation systems. Concepts and components; national innovation systems; sectoral innovation systems; sub-national approaches and the geography of innovation.

  5. Innovation and sustainability. Societal change and socio-technical systems.

Mandatory literature

Jan Fagerberg; The Oxford handbook of innovation. ISBN: 0-19-926455-4 (Ch. 1, 7, 11, 14, 17, 19)
Boschma, R.; Proximity and innovation: a critical assessment, Regional studies, 39(1), 61-74, 2005
Chesbrough, H., & Bogers, M; Explicating open innovation: Clarifying an emerging paradigm for understanding innovation. In Chesbrough, H., Vanhaverbeke, W. & West, J. (eds). New Frontiers in Open Innovation, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014
Pessoa, A.; Innovation and Knowledge Economics, CreateSpace, Charleston, SC, 2014
Schot, J., & Geels, F.; Strategic niche management and sustainable innovation journeys: theory, findings, research agenda, and policy, Technology Analysis & Strategic Management, 20(5), 537-554, 2008
von Hippel, E.; Free Innovation, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2017 (Ch. 1)

Complementary Bibliography

Giovanni Dosi; Technical change and economic theory. ISBN: 0-86187-949-X
Fagerberg, J., & Verspagen, B. ; Technology-gaps, innovation-diffusion and transformation: an evolutionary interpretation, Research policy, 31(8-9), 1291-1304, 2002
Nelson, R., Dosi, G., Helfat, C; Pyka, A., Saviotti, P., Lee, K., Dopfer, K., Malerba, F., & Winter, S.; Modern evolutionary economics: an overview, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2018
Pavitt, K.; Sectoral patterns of technical change: towards a taxonomy and a theory, Research policy, 13(6), 343-373, 1984
Perez, C.; Technological revolutions and techno-economic paradigms, Cambridge journal of economics, 34(1), 185-202, 2010
Swann, P.; The Economics of Innovation: an introduction, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, 2009

Comments from the literature

In addition, a list of state-of-the-art scientific articles will be provided, to be presented and discussed by the students during class.

Teaching methods and learning activities

During class, concepts and theories will be explored and illustrated with examples. Moreover, during the second half of each class, students will be assigned with different texts for presentation and discussion.

Evaluation Type

Distributed evaluation with final exam

Assessment Components

Designation Weight (%)
Exame 70,00
Participação presencial 10,00
Apresentação/discussão de um trabalho científico 20,00
Total: 100,00

Amount of time allocated to each course unit

Designation Time (hours)
Estudo autónomo 145,50
Frequência das aulas 42,00
Apresentação/discussão de um trabalho científico 15,00
Total: 202,50

Eligibility for exams

Continuous evaluation or final exam.

Calculation formula of final grade

Final grade = 70% EXAM + 10% PRES + 10% DISC + 10% PART

EXAM: grade in a final exam; PRES: grade for the presentation of a paper; DISC: grade for the discussion of a paper; PART: quality of overall participation in class.

Or

Final grade = grade in a final exam.

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