call for papers special track on Quadruple Helix Collaboration for Responsible Research and Innovation, Triple Helix Conference, Thessalonici, Greece, 30-9 - 1-10 2019
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Special Track on:
Quadruple Helix Collaborations for Responsible Innovation
Processes, Procedures, People and Impact
Vincent Blok (Wageningen University and Research)(vincent.blok@wur.nl)
Renate Wesselink (Wageningen University and Research)(renate.wesselink@wur.nl)
Eugen Popa (Wageningen University and Research)(eugen.popa@wur.nl)
Call description
Contemporary society faces a series of grand challenges on topics such as energy production, transport, equity, and healthcare. Such challenges require systemic, innovative solutions. Motived by moral obligation to help address these challenges, and pressured from the outside to legitimize themselves in relation to societal needs, existing institutions and actors in the knowledge economy are playing new roles and entering new configurations of collaboration across sectoral divides (Bryson, Crosby, & Stone, 2006, 2015). The Quadruple Helix Collaboration (QHC, henceforth) is an example of such a constellation in which academia, industry, citizens and the government collaborate within the innovation process to create robust, systemic solutions to grand challenges (Carayannis & Campbell, 2010, 2012). As strategies for addressing grand challenges, QHCs are closely related to the idea of responsible research and innovation (RRI), especially the concept of stakeholder inclusion widely discussed in RRI (Asveld, 2017; Blok & Lemmens, 2015; Owen, Macnaghten, & Stilgoe, 2012; Blok, 2019).
The organizers of the track Quadruple Helix Collaboration for Responsible Innovation invite you to join our discussions on QHC and their relationship with RRI. In this track we want to further current research into how such collaborations take place in real life (the process), what methods there are to improve and study these collaborations (the procedures), the individual characteristics that foster a productive and sustainable collaboration (the people) and whether all this leads indeed to a more responsible form of innovation (the impact).
Theme and research topics
For the past two decades, the phenomenon of Quadruple Helix Collaborations, i.e, R&D partnerships between academia, industry, government and civil society, has been widely discussed in both academic literature and policy circles (Arnkil, Järvensivu, Koski, & Piirainen, 2010; Carayannis & Campbell, 2009; Höglund & Linton, 2018; Leydesdorff, 2012; McAdam & Debackere, 2018). Through QHCs, the innovation process is expected to become more inclusive and, as such, its results are expected to be more accountable socially and ethically (Meissner & Carayannis, 2017). This ‘democratization’ of the knowledge production, also referred to as the ‘opening up’ of R&D for competitive advantage and socio-ethical accountability, is supported both by those interested in Quadruple Helix Collaborations but also, as a matter of primary research interest, by scholars interested in responsible research and innovation or RRI (Blok & Lemmens, 2015; Ferri et al., 2018; Grunwald, 2011; Owen, Bessant, & Heintz, 2013; Rip, 2014) and other related subjects such as science governance (Asselt & Renn, 2011; Lansink, Schut, Kamanda, & Klerkx, 2016; Vegt, 2017). Although responsible innovation in industrial settings is underrepresented in current research (Lubberink et al. 2017; Blok, Hofmans & Wubben, 2015), it appears that there is a very significant and potentially fruitful overlap in research interests between these areas, for instance in the area of corporate social responsibility, cross-sector partnerships and multi-stakeholder alliances, stakeholder engagement, and open innovation.
With this track we would like to signal that QHCs and their relationship with RRI have received little attention from an empirical point of view. We would like to explore QHCs more closely as they occur in real-life settings – their ‘natural habitat’ with a specific focus on their ultimate impact for the responsibility of the innovation process. The following research questions are indicative of the type of questions that might be asked at the intersection between these themes/approaches. The aim of these questions is to provide a better understanding of the phenomenon of QHC and its relation to RRI for policy-making purposes. A known challenge for policy-makers who seek to strengthen and support QHCs and RRI is the lack of strong modelling and empirical grounding which makes narratives about QHCs and RRI fluid and highly diverse. A better empirical understanding of the phenomenon can help to bring different strands of research and policy literature together and lead to more efficient, flexible and accountable governance of QHCs. Track contributions are not limited to these specific formulations. Similar questions within the theme given above are very much welcome and will be taken into consideration.
Process: What does a QHC for RRI process look like in its natural habitat?
1. How are QHCs for RRI initiated and how are the partners selected and maintained?
2. What does the interaction/partnership within QHCs consist of and how frequent is the interaction between partners?
3. What kind of conflicts, differences of opinion, power imbalances arise in QHCs for RRI, and how are they managed?
Procedures: What procedures can be used to improve/further QHCs for RRI?
1. What stakeholder interaction tools and project management tools are used in QHC for RRI and what does their success depend upon?
2. What tools are employed to measure the success of a QHC for RRI?
People: What are the necessary/useful individual traits of the participants in the QHCs for RRI?
1. What is the distance (ethical, social, economic, cognitive) between partners and situations in which this distance becomes relevant
2. What are the competencies that are needed/useful in participating in a QHC for RRI?
3. What do participants learn from QHC for RRI at individual and organizational level ?
Relationship to RRI: What is the relationship between QHC and RRI?
1. How can the ‘RRI level’ of an innovation process can best be measured within the context of a QHC?
2. Are QHCs perceived as being more responsible than other collaboration sub-sets of the four helixes?
3. What are the factors that impact the responsibility of the innovation in the context of QHCs?
Submission:
Please submit your abstract via het website: https://www.triplehelixcongress.com/ If you want to contact us to discuss possible contributions and collaborations, please contact vincent.blok@wur.nl
Bibliography
Arnkil, R., Järvensivu, A., Koski, P., & Piirainen, T. (2010). Exploring quadruple helix outlining user-oriented innovation models.
Asselt, M. V., & Renn, O. (2011). Risk governance. Journal of Risk Research, 14, 431-449.
Asveld, L. (Ed.) (2017). Responsible innovation 3: A European agenda? Cham, Switzerland: Springer.
Blok, V. (2019). From participation to interruption: Toward an ethics of stakeholder engagement, Participation and Partnership in CSR and Responsible Innovation. In: R. von Schomberg & J. Hankins (Eds.), Handbook Responsible Innovation: A Global Resource. (Edward Elgar 2019)(forthcoming).
Blok, V., & Lemmens, P. (2015). The emerging concept of responsible innovation. Three reasons why it is questionable and calls for a radical transformation of the concept of innovation. In Responsible Innovation 2 (pp. 19-35): Springer.
Blok, V., Hoffmans, L., Wubben, E. (2015). “Stakeholder Engagement for Responsible Innovation in the Private Sector: Critical Issues and Management Practices”. Journal of Chain and Network Science 15(2): 147-164.
Bryson, J. M., Crosby, B. C., & Stone, M. M. (2006). The Design and Implementation of Cross-Sector Collaborations: Propositions from the Literature. Public Administration Review, 66(s1), 44-55. doi:doi:10.1111/j.1540-6210.2006.00665.x
Bryson, J. M., Crosby, B. C., & Stone, M. M. (2015). Designing and Implementing Cross-Sector Collaborations: Needed and Challenging. Public Administration Review, 75(5), 647-663. doi:10.1111/puar.12432
Carayannis, E. G., & Campbell, D. F. (2009). 'Mode 3'and'Quadruple Helix': toward a 21st century fractal innovation ecosystem. International journal of technology management, 46(3-4), 201-234.
Carayannis, E. G., & Campbell, D. F. (2010). Triple Helix, Quadruple Helix and Quintuple Helix and how do knowledge, innovation and the environment relate to each other?: a proposed framework for a trans-disciplinary analysis of sustainable development and social ecology. International Journal of Social Ecology and Sustainable Development (IJSESD), 1(1), 41-69.
Carayannis, E. G., & Campbell, D. F. (2012). Mode 3 knowledge production in quadruple helix innovation systems. In Mode 3 knowledge production in quadruple helix innovation systems (pp. 1-63): Springer.
Ferri, F., Dwyer, N., Raicevich, S., Grifoni, P., Altiok, H., Andersen, H., . . . Silvestri, C. (2018). Governance and Sustainability of REsponsible Researc and Innovation Processes: Cases and Experiences. Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature.
Grunwald, A. (2011). Responsible Innovation: Bringing together Technology Assessment, Applied Ethics, and STS research: Karlsruhe Institure of Technology.
Höglund, L., & Linton, G. (2018). Smart specialization in regional innovation systems: a quadruple helix perspective. R&D Management, 48(1), 60-72.
Lansink, A. O., Schut, M., Kamanda, J., & Klerkx, L. (2016). A multi-level and multi-actor approach to risk governance: a conceptual framework to support policy development for Ambrosia weed control. 21.
Leydesdorff, L. (2012). The Triple Helix, Quadruple Helix, …, and an N-Tuple of Helices: Explanatory Models for Analyzing the Knowledge-Based Economy? Journal of the Knowledge Economy, 3(1), 25-35. doi:10.1007/s13132-011-0049-4
Lubberink, R. Blok, V., van Ophem, J., Omta, O. (2017) “Lessons for responsible innovation in the business context: a systematic review of responsible-, social- and sustainable innovation practices. Sustainability (in press)
McAdam, M., & Debackere, K. (2018). Beyond ‘triple helix’ toward ‘quadruple helix’ models in regional innovation systems: implications for theory and practice. R&D Management, 48(1), 3-6. doi:doi:10.1111/radm.12309
Meissner, D., & Carayannis, E. G. (2017). Value generation from industry-science linkages in light of targeted open innovation. Journal of Knowledge Management, 21(2), 295-307. doi:10.1108/jkm-11-2016-0510
Owen, R., Bessant, J., & Heintz, M. (2013). Responsible Innovation: Managing the responsible emergence of science and innovation in society. UK: WILEY & Sons,Ltd. , Publication.
Owen, R., Macnaghten, P., & Stilgoe, J. (2012). Responsible research and innovation: From science in society to science for society, with society. UK: Oxford University Press.
Rip, A. (2014). The Past and future of RRI. Netherlands: University of Twente.
Vegt, R. G. v. d. (2017). A literature review on the relationship between risk governance and public engagement in relation to complex environmental issues. 19.
Dr. Vincent Blok MBA
Associate Professor in Business Ethics, Philosophy of Technology and Responsible Innovation
Wageningen University
Business Management and Organisation Group and Philosophy Group
Hollandseweg 1, 6706 KN, Wageningen (Building 201)
De Leeuwenborch, Room 5060
T: +31 (0) 6 146 156 40
E-mail: vincent.blok@wur.nl
Website: www.vincentblok.nl
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Vincent_Blok
https://wur.academia.edu/VincentBlok
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