IØ8902 – Innovation Research – From Origin to Current Frontier

Course Organization

The NORSI course Innovation research – From origin to current frontier – IØ9802 aims to provide a set of advanced insights into the field of innovation studies focusing on theoretical developments as well as strategic innovation managment.

NORSI Institutions: The course is part of Nordic Research School on Innovation and Entreprenurship (NORSI)This NORSI course is organized and co-created in collaboration between HVL and UiO-TIK. The course will be held at HVL in Bergen.

When: 2-6 of October 2023

Location: HVL, Bergen

Application Form: https://nettskjema.no/a/248062#/page/1

Application Deadline: 1st of September 2023

Level of course: Ph.D. course


Type of course
: Introduction and specialization course for students studying entrepreneurship and innovation for their PhD.

Language: English


ECTS credits:
 7.5 ECTS accredited by HVL

PhD students presentations: 15 minutes max (including Q&A)

Workshop with participants: “Future challenges for innovation studies”.

Paper/Assignment

The assignment for the innovation course is an academic paper. Max. length is 5000 words + references. Use your supervisor for advice and guidance before you submit your paper. We encourage you to link the paper to your own PhD project, however we expect you to make use of one or more perspectives taught during the course.
Deadline for paper assignment: TBA

Content

The course aims to provide a set of advanced insights into innovation research spanning from foundational themes to the most recent developments of the field. The competitiveness of firms, economic growth and societal sustainability in general depend on the ability to introduce innovative products, processes and services. Innovation research is typically divided into systems approaches on the one hand, emphasizing the networked, distributed and embedded nature of innovation and its impact on economic growth, societal sustainability and other meso/macro outcomes and a corporate and a managerial approach, focusing in particular on strategic issues and innovation dynamics at the micro-level. Both approaches deal with how processes of innovation occur at different but related levels of aggregation.

Traditionally, the system approach has dealt primarily with the allocation of resources to innovation, organizational and institutional dynamics and its macroeconomic effects (e.g. the relation between innovation on the one hand and a country’s competitiveness and economic growth on the other). More recently, greater attention is also given to the wider effects of innovation capabilities and processes on themes such as social cohesion and/or environmental sustainability. Increasingly the centrality of innovation for numerous socio-economic and sustainability-related objectives is also recognized by policy-makers at various levels, for example in relation to productivity, ‘mission’ and societal challenges. Within the systems approach the innovation process at the micro level (e.g. in firms) has been treated more or less as a ‘black box’. Innovation is a complex and dynamic organizational process – with repeating cycles of divergent and convergent activities – that both depends on and spurs of organizational learning and adaptation.

Taking a strategic perspective on these processes is important to grasp opportunities and hindrances, as well as identifying the role of intentional action. Interest in management of innovation has traditionally centered on firm-internal aspects of processes such as, for instance, how collaboration and interaction among specialized professionals take place in the creation of innovation; how to deal with unavoidable uncertainty involved; and the path dependency in skills and resources. In recent years there has been a surge in interest among scholars and practitioners in methods that allow the firm systematically to source its inputs externally. Innovation that originate from sources external to the firm has emerged as an important phenomenon and has been associated with labels such as open innovation, user innovation, crowd sourcing, and open source. These trends have also given rise to novel and so far immature research agendas that promise to enhance our understanding of the processes and sources of innovation in the years to come.

Course material and teaching activities

Scientific articles and selected literature – for part 1 please see schedule.

The course is scheduled as two intensive seminars, as a combination of lectures, seminars and paper writing exercises

Learning objectives

  • To provide insight in innovation research from its origin to recent development in the field
  • To provide specific knowledge about “the systems of innovation” approach
  • To provide specific knowledge about managerial approaches to innovation research
  • Candidates should be capable to reflect on innovation research on both macro and microlevel (and how different perspectives are interlinked)
  • Candidates following the course should capable to reflect and position their own research within the field of innovation research

Date & Location

Date to be announced