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Exploring the potential impact of FLA on national innovation systems

The 4th International Seville Conference on Future-Oriented Technology Analysis (FTA) 12 & 13 May 2011. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on national innovation systems. Matthias Weber 1 , Attila Havas 2 , Doris Schartinger 1. 1 AIT Austrian Institute of Technology, Austria;

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Exploring the potential impact of FLA on national innovation systems

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  1. The 4th International Seville Conference onFuture-Oriented Technology Analysis (FTA)12 & 13 May 2011 Exploring the potential impact of FLA on national innovation systems Matthias Weber1, Attila Havas2, Doris Schartinger1 1 AIT Austrian Institute of Technology, Austria; 2 Institute of Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest

  2. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS Background and guiding question • Limited number of evaluations and impact analyses of forward looking activities (FLAs), some anecdotal evidence and almost complete absence of systematic meta-analysis of FLA impacts • Little systematic guidance on designing FLAs with high impact potential on innovation systems • Several reasons • high diversity of FLA methods and approaches • complexity of innovation systems • contingencies at play • What types of FLAs are suitable for addressing what types of policy problems in innovation systems, and under which types of conditions ?

  3. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS Focus on national innovation systems • Focus on FLAs in support of national innovation systems and their performance • What are typical problems and policy needs to be addressed by FLAs on national innovation systems? • Key activities or functions of innovation systems • Emerging and future bottlenecks or problems in the innovation systems to be addressed by FLAs • Within IS, the policy governance sub-system is the most important context for FLA, and where it is to have the most immediate impact • In order to have impact on policy needs/problems, an FLA must fit into the context of the policy governance subsystem of the IS

  4. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS Guiding question • Two types of interpretation • Forward-looking: explore the likely or potential fit • Retrospective: Compare fit and actual impact • The designer’s question • What type of FLA is likely to have a good fit with different types of anticipated policy needs/problems and the conditions of different types of policy governance sub-systems, and thus likely to have a high impact ? • The evaluator’s questions • How well did the FLA fit to policy governance sub-system and the type of emerging or anticipated policy need/problem? • Did it actually have an impact on resolving that problem, and if not, why?

  5. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS Conceptual framework • Identification and specification of three levels of analysis • Different types of structural policy needs/problems in NIS • Taxonomy of policy governance sub-systems (PGS) • Taxonomy of Forward-looking activities (FLAs) • There are no ready made typologies of PGS and FLAs • Taxonomies at the level of different key dimensions • Investigate how well they “fit” to each other, assuming that a high degree of fit would enhance the impact potential

  6. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS Paper title] Types of policy needs • Four main types of structural policy needs: • Some important elements of NIS are missing; • The important elements are in place, but the relationships are underdeveloped; • The important elements are in place, but they do not perform satisfactorily; • The system works properly in structural and relational terms, but needs guidance on the research and innovation directions to take.

  7. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS The dimensions of a PGS taxonomy • Policy governance sub-systems of NIS can differ along the following dimensions: • oligopolistic vs. distributed • antagonistic vs. consensual • output- vs. process-based legitimacy • systematic vs. sparse use of a differentiated set of policy preparation tools (PPTs)

  8. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS The dimensions of a PGS taxonomy • The dimensions of the taxonomy are not fully independent from each other • need to check relationships across the four dimensions (“hypotheses”) • Example: • Is there a relationship between the oligopolistic/distributed character of PGS and the prevailing form of legitimacy? • Oligopolistic and corporatist governance systems with a strong hierarchical component would tend to rely on output-based legitimacy, and is rather unlikely to make use of process legitimacy (e.g. China) • Governance systems where power is executed in a distributed way tend to rely to a significant extent on process-based legitimacy (e.g. Most Western European countries)

  9. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS The dimensions of an FLA taxonomy • FLAs can differ along the following dimensions: • Embedded vs. stand-alone • High vs. low level of participation • Reinforcing vs. transformative with regard to the existing NIS

  10. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS The dimensions of an FLA taxonomy • The dimensions of the taxonomy are not fully independent from each other • need to check relationships across the four dimensions (“hypotheses”) • Example: • Is there a relationship between embedded/stand-alone character and the transformative/reinforcing character of an FLA? • Highly embedded FLAs are unlikely to be transformative, because of the greater visibility of stand-alone processes • Transformative FLAs can be supportive to ongoing transformations of NIS (e.g. Foresights in CEECs),... • ... but there can be many contingencies preventing or delaying impacts (e.g. Hungary)

  11. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS FLAs and PGS • Key hypothesis... • The better the fit between FLA dimensions and PGS dimensions, the greater the likelihood of achieving a high impact • ... broken down into a matrix of hypotheses

  12. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS Two examples • Antagonistic/consensual PGS – reinforcing/transformative FLA • In an antagonistic PGS, transformative FLAs are more likely to be launched, mainly to improve the performance of other subsystems of the NIS than the PGS itself • In a consensual PGS, it is less likely that transformative FLAs will be initiated, because they would inevitably raise issues that would entail disadvantages to some of the stakeholder groups involved. • Germany: Futur pursued transformative objectives, but could not break up the prevailing consensus about delimiting research (policy) fields among dominant stakeholders. • Systematic sparse use of PPTs – embedded/stand-alone FLA • If a differentiated and rich a set of PPTs is applied systematically in a PGS, the likelihood of realizing embedded FLAs is higher. This goes hand in hand with a rather limited visibility (and impact !) of FLAs within a broad spectrum of PPTs; FLAs become invisible and integrated in other PPTs. • Sweden: embedded FLAs in a PGS where PPTs are used systematically

  13. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS The “fit” between PGS, FLAs and policy problem • An additional complication • the fit between PGS and FLAs should not be seen in isolation • The type of policy problem to be tackled comes into play as well • Rather than setting up a three-dimensional “fitting matrix”, the PGS/FLA framework is applied to study a range of national cases that cover different types of policy problems in NIS • First test cases using existing evaluations: • Hungarian Foresight • 2nd Swedish Foresight • (Germany Futur/BMBF Foresight) • others

  14. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS • The Swedish case: 2nd Swedish Technology FS • Wide-spread and systematic use of PPTs in the Swedish governance system • A situation where impact is rather unlikely to be high • In addition contingencies • Window of opportunity to influence Research Bill had passed • Process was perceived party-political • Wide invitation of stakeholders, but official results (FLA products) were based on panel discussions, hence limited participation • “an immensely joyful experience”, but ultimately with limited impact

  15. Exploring the potential impact of FLA on NIS Conclusions • A first step towards a framework for systematically investigating actual or potential impacts of FLAs on NIS • Initial hypotheses still need to be refined and underpinned by empirical material from past evaluations of FLA • Not all hypotheses are “interesting” and useful, pointing to a need to reconsider the dimensions • The framework will never become a guarantee for success and impact; contingencies can always come into play. • The relationships investigated are not static, but FLAs can influence and change the PGS in the course of time • Still, the framework could serve as guidance for the design of FLAs, with a view of enhancing their impact • The approach could be extended to other IS than national ones

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