23 research outputs found
The Open Innovation in Science research field: a collaborative conceptualisation approach
Openness and collaboration in scientific research are attracting increasing attention from scholars and practitioners alike. However, a common understanding of these phenomena is hindered by disciplinary boundaries and disconnected research streams. We link dispersed knowledge on Open Innovation, Open Science, and related concepts such as Responsible Research and Innovation by proposing a unifying Open Innovation in Science (OIS) Research Framework. This framework captures the antecedents, contingencies, and consequences of open and collaborative practices along the entire process of generating and disseminating scientific insights and translating them into innovation. Moreover, it elucidates individual-, team-, organisation-, field-, and societyâlevel factors shaping OIS practices. To conceptualise the framework, we employed a collaborative approach involving 47 scholars from multiple disciplines, highlighting both tensions and commonalities between existing approaches. The OIS Research Framework thus serves as a basis for future research, informs policy discussions, and provides guidance to scientists and practitioners
FINDER - Managing innovation in the networked organization
Interview descriptions from employees within the firm Atos as well as partnered organizations concerning collaborative innovation strategies and processes enacted to modernize Atos' financial services portfolio. Due to proprietary topics discussed and that the release of raw data could potentially incur severe damage to individuals' careers, interview contents are broadly redacted and generalized. Readers however can contact the lead author for specific requests on the dataset (alt email for after lead author's time on project ends: [email protected]).This project (FINDER) has received funding from the European Unionâs Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie SkĆodowska-Curie grant agreement No 813095
Firm legitimacy in the face of nascent ecosystemic uncertainty
Contains fulltext :
233639.pdf (Authorâs version preprint ) (Open Access)European Group for Organization Studies 2020 Colloquium, 02 juli 202
Digital innovation: transforming research and practice
There is no doubt that digital technologies are spawning ongoing innovation across most if not all sectors of the economy and society. In this essay, we take stock of the characteristics of digital technologies that give rise to this new reality and introduce the papers in this special issue. In addition, we also highlight the unprecedent opportunities that digital innovation provides to study innovation processes more generally. Overall, we conclude that the speed, observability, and relative ease in investigating relationships between multiple analytical levels, mean that digital innovation is both a âmodel ofâ that also provides a âmodel forâ the study of innovation processes more broadly in non-digital and hybrid contexts