To what extent can we identify distinct instruments and country policy goals that reflect a novel co-creation approach vs. a more traditional knowledge-transfer approach?
You could use keywords to delineate a 'novel co-creation' approach from a 'traditional knowledge transfer' approach, e.g.
- Co-creation: ‘joint’, longer time period (e.g. institutional), involvement of different actors (e.g. including civil society)
- Knowledge transfer: based on contracts, short-term, university-industry based
- STIP Compass has a thematic portal dedicated to this topic, which offers further insights on these definitions: https://stip.oecd.org/knowledge-transfer/
- Analysis could be extended to the Covid Watch policy data to explore whether the Covid-19 response initiatives are particularly characteristic of a co-creation approach?
- Keyword Data: provides a list of categorized keywords presented in the 'Tag' column in STIP Compass. The keywords have been assigned a category (Co-creation, Knowledge Transfer, Neutral) based on the weight given in STIP Compass. This data is used for triangulation with TIP Strategies and STI Scoreboard.
- TIP Strategies (Python folder):
- Example keywords: knowledge_transfer, co-creation, commercialisation, technology_transfer, clusters, intellectual_property
- STIP Compass (R folder):
- Collaborative research and innovation (TH42, 537 policies); Commercialisation of public research (TH, 314 policies); Cluster policies (TH47, 278 policies); Intellectual property rights in public research (TH46, 163 policies); Intersectoral mobility (TH44, 113 policies); Transfer and linkage strategies (TH41, 183 policies)
- STI.Scoreboard (R folder):
- HERD/GOVERD financed by firms; innovative firms cooperating with HEIs and PRIs; ...