Driving factors for cluster development - Which kind of spatial rootedness and change?

Driving factors and mechanisms for cluster development have often been investigated based on the standard cluster approach as conceptualised e.g. by Michael Porter. These studies have revealed certain insights regarding the role of local entrepreneurship, factor conditions, demand, and related in...

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Main Authors: Tödtling, Franz, Auer, Alexander, Sinozic, Tanja
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: WU Vienna University of Economics and Business 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://epub.wu.ac.at/4417/1/sre%2Ddisc%2D2014_06.pdf
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spelling ndltd-VIENNA-oai-epub.wu-wien.ac.at-44172018-05-05T05:18:44Z Driving factors for cluster development - Which kind of spatial rootedness and change? Tödtling, Franz Auer, Alexander Sinozic, Tanja RVK QY 000 Oberösterreich / Unweltschutzindustrie / Wien / Neue Medien / Informationstechnische Industrie / Cluster / Wirtschaft / Unternehmensentwicklung Driving factors and mechanisms for cluster development have often been investigated based on the standard cluster approach as conceptualised e.g. by Michael Porter. These studies have revealed certain insights regarding the role of local entrepreneurship, factor conditions, demand, and related industries in supporting clusters. However, such factors were analysed often from a static competitiveness perspective, and they were often seen as rooted in a region or part of an overly schematic local-global pattern. We suggest instead that driving factors of cluster development coexist at several spatial scales such as regional, national, European and global levels. We also argue that specific factors change in their importance for firms and for clusters over time, and that these changes are industry- and knowledge base specific. Relying on insights from cluster life cycle-, evolutionary- and knowledge base approaches among others we investigate changes in driving factors for cluster development and their relationship to different geographical scales. We provide some answers to these questions by comparing the environmental technology sector of Upper Austria and the New Media sector of Vienna, industries that differ in their knowledge bases and their spatial rootedness. (authors' abstract) WU Vienna University of Economics and Business 2014 Paper NonPeerReviewed en application/pdf http://epub.wu.ac.at/4417/1/sre%2Ddisc%2D2014_06.pdf Series: SRE - Discussion Papers http://epub.wu.ac.at/4417/
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language en
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sources NDLTD
topic RVK QY 000
Oberösterreich / Unweltschutzindustrie / Wien / Neue Medien / Informationstechnische Industrie / Cluster / Wirtschaft / Unternehmensentwicklung
spellingShingle RVK QY 000
Oberösterreich / Unweltschutzindustrie / Wien / Neue Medien / Informationstechnische Industrie / Cluster / Wirtschaft / Unternehmensentwicklung
Tödtling, Franz
Auer, Alexander
Sinozic, Tanja
Driving factors for cluster development - Which kind of spatial rootedness and change?
description Driving factors and mechanisms for cluster development have often been investigated based on the standard cluster approach as conceptualised e.g. by Michael Porter. These studies have revealed certain insights regarding the role of local entrepreneurship, factor conditions, demand, and related industries in supporting clusters. However, such factors were analysed often from a static competitiveness perspective, and they were often seen as rooted in a region or part of an overly schematic local-global pattern. We suggest instead that driving factors of cluster development coexist at several spatial scales such as regional, national, European and global levels. We also argue that specific factors change in their importance for firms and for clusters over time, and that these changes are industry- and knowledge base specific. Relying on insights from cluster life cycle-, evolutionary- and knowledge base approaches among others we investigate changes in driving factors for cluster development and their relationship to different geographical scales. We provide some answers to these questions by comparing the environmental technology sector of Upper Austria and the New Media sector of Vienna, industries that differ in their knowledge bases and their spatial rootedness. (authors' abstract) === Series: SRE - Discussion Papers
author Tödtling, Franz
Auer, Alexander
Sinozic, Tanja
author_facet Tödtling, Franz
Auer, Alexander
Sinozic, Tanja
author_sort Tödtling, Franz
title Driving factors for cluster development - Which kind of spatial rootedness and change?
title_short Driving factors for cluster development - Which kind of spatial rootedness and change?
title_full Driving factors for cluster development - Which kind of spatial rootedness and change?
title_fullStr Driving factors for cluster development - Which kind of spatial rootedness and change?
title_full_unstemmed Driving factors for cluster development - Which kind of spatial rootedness and change?
title_sort driving factors for cluster development - which kind of spatial rootedness and change?
publisher WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
publishDate 2014
url http://epub.wu.ac.at/4417/1/sre%2Ddisc%2D2014_06.pdf
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