This paper concerns the role of spatial leadership in the development of the knowledge-based economy. It is argued within academic and practitioner circles that leadership of knowledge networks requires a particular non-hierarchical style that is required to establish an ambience conducive to networking and knowledge sharing across boundaries. In this paper, we explore this hypothesis at both theoretical and empirical levels. Theoretically, we propose a conceptualization of relational knowledge leadership, which is ‘nomadic’ in its capacity to travel across multiple scales and cross sectoral, thematic and geographical boundaries. We have operationalized this type of relational knowledge leadership along four key features, derived from liter...
Innovative capacity of firms has traditionally been explained through intra-firm characteristics. In...
The forces of globalisation now impacting on local economies pose threats to the existing paradigm o...
Innovative capacity of firms has traditionally been explained through intra-firm characteristics. In...
This paper concerns the role of spatial leadership in the development of the knowledge-based economy...
Purpose This chapter addresses the question how entrepreneurial synergies can be stimulated in place...
Despite the major changes encompassed by the term globalisation and the enabling power of new commun...
New innovation and industrial policies contribute to the development of an informal economy and have...
In this article we discuss the development of city regional governance leadership in two sub-regions...
Models of sub-national governance have grown in popularity across Europe, but the notion of place-ba...
Making sense of variety in place leadership: the case of England’s smart cities. Regional Studies. T...
Place leadership is at a critical juncture. Since the 1990s it has been taken-for-granted that for p...
© 2016 Regional Studies Association. Leadership and systems of governance: the constraints on the sc...
This paper examines the leadership of places – cities, regions, communities – in Australia, Finland,...
For geographers, debates surrounding the knowledge economy have reinvigorated interest in the geogra...
Past analyses rooted in thick description of regions successful in constructing regional innovation ...
Innovative capacity of firms has traditionally been explained through intra-firm characteristics. In...
The forces of globalisation now impacting on local economies pose threats to the existing paradigm o...
Innovative capacity of firms has traditionally been explained through intra-firm characteristics. In...
This paper concerns the role of spatial leadership in the development of the knowledge-based economy...
Purpose This chapter addresses the question how entrepreneurial synergies can be stimulated in place...
Despite the major changes encompassed by the term globalisation and the enabling power of new commun...
New innovation and industrial policies contribute to the development of an informal economy and have...
In this article we discuss the development of city regional governance leadership in two sub-regions...
Models of sub-national governance have grown in popularity across Europe, but the notion of place-ba...
Making sense of variety in place leadership: the case of England’s smart cities. Regional Studies. T...
Place leadership is at a critical juncture. Since the 1990s it has been taken-for-granted that for p...
© 2016 Regional Studies Association. Leadership and systems of governance: the constraints on the sc...
This paper examines the leadership of places – cities, regions, communities – in Australia, Finland,...
For geographers, debates surrounding the knowledge economy have reinvigorated interest in the geogra...
Past analyses rooted in thick description of regions successful in constructing regional innovation ...
Innovative capacity of firms has traditionally been explained through intra-firm characteristics. In...
The forces of globalisation now impacting on local economies pose threats to the existing paradigm o...
Innovative capacity of firms has traditionally been explained through intra-firm characteristics. In...