Collaborative innovation is increasingly put forward as a way of addressing the many wicked problems our society faces today. This article focuses on how politicians indirectly affect projects of collaborative innovation and whether stakeholders experience
them as helpful or hindering to the project. The impact of politicians on projects of collaborative innovation are compared across four cases and throughout three project phases (set-up, implementation and sustainment). The results show six ways in which
politicians can help projects of collaborative innovation: by providing funding, by making
a project a political priority, by connecting stakeholders, by resolving stakeholder conflicts,
by unblocking red tape barriers and by extending a collaborative network legitimacy.
Furthermore, stakeholders perceived politicians as potentially hindering
collaborative innovation projects in three ways: through the adjustment of the project goals, through the loss of a project’s ‘neutral’ status and through blocking or obstructing a project.status: Published onlin
Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.