ABSTRACT

Systems of innovation that are conducted within national borders can preserve inefficient solutions and prevent development. This has led to a feeling that transnational learning strategies are more and more desirable.

In practice, the field of transnational learning has been dominated by various policy-making institutions, such as the OECD and European Union, working through different types of policy instruments and programs such as structural funds, open methods of coordination, as well as international research institutions and networks set up by cooperating national governments working on comparative analysis, benchmarking and indicators.

This book lays out a set of methods which can further enhance the experience of transnational learning, starting from the sociological ideas promoted by Charles Sabel of learning through monitoring, and by Marie Laure Djelic and others of the “translation” of experiences between different countries. Case studies and examples are collected from three fields: industrial development, tourism and local government.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

Learning transnational learning

part I|232 pages

Conceptual preliminaries, theories and methods of transnational learning

chapter 1|38 pages

Sociological preliminaries

The societal context of transnational learning

chapter 2|51 pages

Geographical perspectives

Regional development and transnational learning

chapter 7|25 pages

Discovering the process perspective

Unfolding the potential of transnational learning in INTERREG

part II|112 pages

Nordic attempts at transnational learning

chapter 8|17 pages

Nordic learning

Introduction to Part II

chapter 9|23 pages

Industrial development and competence building

Learning across converging trajectories

chapter 10|26 pages

Is there a need for transnational learning?

The case of restructuring in small industrial towns

chapter 12|17 pages

Learning transnational learning

A transatlantic perspective

chapter 13|12 pages

Transnational learning in local governance

Two lessons from Finland