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New local economic development paradigms? Paper presented to

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Title: New local economic development paradigms? Paper presented to


1
New local economic development paradigms?Paper
presented to Where are we now?, 6th Seminar in
ESRC Seminar Series Local economic development
in an age of resource scarcity, Liverpool, 17th
December 2008
  • Paul Benneworth, Lars Coenen, Fernando Dias
    Lopez
  • KITE, Newcastle University, Netherlands
    Organisation for Scientific Applied Research

2
Outline of presentation
  • Hook the scalar question
  • Climate change big, local strategies small
  • Local development paradigms
  • A multi-scalar perspective (big small)
  • Local niches driving regime/ landscape change
  • What makes local strategies eye-catching?
  • Upscaling niche change?
  • Reflections for local/ regional development policy

3
Acknowledgements
  • Co-authors
  • TNO Built Environment and Geosciences
  • ESRC Seminar organisers
  • RCUK (Fellowship on Territorial Governance of
    Innovation)

4
Think global, act local?
  • Background to seminar series group of
    ex-editorial board of Local Economy
  • Idea of series
  • to rethink from the bottom-up what a radical
    local economic development policy would look like
    given the new environmental constraints
  • 1980s radical alternative to (early)
    neo-liberal/ Thatcherite deregulation
  • 2000s Same principles, different environment

5
The curious conundrum of vanishing initiatives.
  • Current invisibility of resource scarcity/
    environmental catastrophe
  • Nothing pithy e.g. 3m unemployed
  • Global structures dwarf local agency
  • The search for global responses little infill
  • Plethora of highly interesting experiments
  • Everything possible, from LETS?ØC building
  • Failure to bring about wide-scale change
  • Why have successes not been upscaled?

6
The scalar challenge of the new environmental
politics
  • Upscaling increasing depth, breadth, scope
  • Depth intensity of local activity
  • Breadth geographical spread of idea
  • Scope number of actors involved/ committed
  • LA21 as serious attempt to create local infill
  • Global structure lacking national support
  • More than pure global/ local challenge
  • Multi-level nature of new scalar challenge

7
Local policies multiple levels
  • Illustrate via rise of local innovation
    paradigm
  • Emerged in 1980s competitiveness angst
  • Early 1990s, European experiments
  • Art. 10 ? RITTS/ RIS ? Objective funds
  • Lisbon declaration innovation pan-EU aim
  • Visible targets (eg 3 GERD/ GDP, 50 HE)
  • National reporting requirements
  • Prerequisite for local strategies
  • New local paradigm using multi-level support

8
A multi-level policy perspective
  • Interplay between different levels important
  • Local niche the space for experimentation
  • Meso regime national societal system
  • Macro landscape of norms, values, trends
  • Local objects can shape landscapes if they
    are taken up by higher actors (eg DG REGIO)
  • Local experiments drive system change
  • RTP (1992) 7 regions ? model for local policy
  • Use of local/ international experts network
    building

9
The multi-level perspective (II)
10
Policy shifting processes
11
Key elements of a successful local?global
policy shift
  • Success
  • A local policy seen to have worked in context
  • Allure
  • Something magical about the approach
  • Higher level support
  • Helps higher level agents solve their problems
  • Transfer agents
  • Mechanisms for transferring ideas approaches
  • How could this work for a new paradigm?

12
The response life-cycle
  • Conceptualise societal shifts as four phases
  • Denial problem does not exist
  • Lethargy problem is too big to address
  • Innovation a search for solutions to problem
  • Implementation rolling out solutions
  • Feedback loops between the phases
  • Not a simple/ linear shift
  • Changing evidence changes pathways
  • Changing political weather changes pathways

13
Four phases of transition
System Indicators


Stabilization

Breakthrough

Take off

Predevelopment

Time
Source Rotmans, Kemp et al (2000)
14
Multi-level processes within a transition process
Policy shifting processes in multi-level
innovation governance arrangements
Source after Ressico, 2006 Benneworth, 2007
OECD/ NUTEK, 2007 OECD 2008 Sotarauta
Kautonen, 2007.
15
Local innovation triggering higher level system
shifts
Source Bosch Rotmans (2007)
16
Revisiting the scalar challenge
  • New policy approach changes across levels
  • Local policies supported by higher changes
  • Co-evolution of societal systems to new point
  • Interweaving of local changes in new systems
  • Transition not a simple/ linear process
  • Actors pulling in different directions
  • Many different niches competing
  • How to identify accentuate desirable ones?

17
Scalar challenge as blockage
  • Climate change locked-in to denial/ lethargy?
  • Problems not locally observable
  • Do not fit with big picture of scientific
    evidence
  • Scientific evidence vs political arguments?
  • Multi-scale hole in the problem?
  • Highly complex problem -
  • Certainty at 1 level - uncertainty at next level?
  • Lack of transfer between levels?

18
Locally locked-in policy
Policy shifting processes in multi-level
innovation governance arrangements
Source after Ressico, 2006 Benneworth, 2007
OECD/ NUTEK, 2007 OECD 2008 Sotarauta
Kautonen, 2007.
19
Wicked issues breaking lock-in!
  • Which are the most successful local actions?
  • What are next steps to unselfconsciousness?
  • What is the canon of eye-catching approaches?
  • Who will fund more detailed experiments?
  • Linking local actions with higher level shifts
  • What kinds of initiatives have higher appeal?
  • in the credit crunch and New Keynsian age
  • How can the challenges acquire a human face?
  • Which enemy must we mobilise against...?
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