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All Australian regions are not born equal: understanding the regional innovation management sandpit

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 13:28 authored by Anton Kriz, Courtney MolloyCourtney Molloy, Alexandra Kriz, Sabrina Sonntag
In this article, we highlight and challenge an overly simplistic assessment of regions and regional innovation systems in Australia. Treating each region and place as equal and prescribing blanket policy is anathema to the reality. Having argued that places are not equivalent, we then move on to highlight that commonalities at a deeper institutional level are possible. We draw on fieldwork and ongoing action research from the Australian regions of Hunter and Central Coast (New South Wales) and Northern Tasmania. Results of the theory and case work have been instrumental in the development of 11 structural attributes of a regional innovation management (RIM) sandpit framework. The framework provides attributes but also important process insights related to regional programs, enterprise development, and project innovations. Although developing from the Australian context, we expect that the RIM Sandpit and its place-based insights can be generalized to other regions around the world.

History

Journal title

Technology Innovation Management Review

Volume

6

Issue

6

Pagination

11-23

Publisher

Carleton University

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Business and Law

School

Newcastle Business School

Rights statement

The Technology Innovation Management Review is published under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. Authors retain full copyright to their individual works.