SPECIAL SESSIONS

SS11: Social networks and the geography of innovation

Name and affiliations of the session organisers

  • Robert Panitz (Koblenz University)
  • Johannes Glückler (Heidelberg University)

Description

Organizational network research focuses on formal and informal structures in and between organizations as well as on the processes of institutionalization of initially loose networks of individuals and organizations. Questions arise about the association between networks, organizations, and innovation, such as the interplay between formal and informal relations, or the effect of the structure of these relations on the performance and innovativeness of organizations and industrial clusters.

Furthermore, a better understanding of the governance of networks and the transfer of knowledge and resources in networks is necessary to achieve collective goals. Simultaneously, debates on power asymmetries and favorable positions in global value chains, networks, and production networks (GVC, GVN, and GPN) lead to the question of who benefits from innovative activities in such structures. Whereas the use of the term network in organizational contexts has become increasingly inflationary, there is still a deficit in the theoretical and empirical examination of the conditions, mechanisms, and consequences of network properties in specific organizational and spatial contexts that trigger innovation. Although it is widely acknowledged that communication, support, and exchange networks of employees in and between firms affect the innovative performance of firms, empirical research rarely covers such networks of employees in larger organizations. Similarly, analyses of global network structures among cities, regions, and countries often build on bi-partite networks without the possibility to measure the exact content of relationships, exchange, and flows among people and firms. Finally, we face the challenge in network and innovation research to develop socially meaningful and context-sensitive theories while using the universal methodological language of graph theory. This creates a gap between formalistic and relational approaches explaining the occurrence of innovation in social network structures.

We invite contributions with a focus on network theoretical, analytical, and practical aspects that address, among others, the following topics: 

  •  How powerful are methods of qualitative and quantitative network analysis for understanding innovation? 
  • How can we overcome the gap between the explanation and the design of innovative networks? 
  • To what extent are social and organizational networks characterized by self-organization, external control or dependence on environmental factors in their workings? 
  • What is the relationship between intra- and inter-organizational levels of connectivity? 
  • What role do new forms of organization and interaction play in organizational innovation? 
  • What kind of new data can help to get a better overview of social networks in and between firms?  
  • What are the ethical challenges in organizational network research? 

ORGANISER

The Manchester Institute of Innovation Research

PARTNERS

The Manchester Urban Institute           Creative Manchester logo

SPONSORS

The University of Manchester Hallsworth Conference Fund           The Regional Studies Association           The Productivity Institute