ABSTRACT

A small number of countries, regions, cities, and localities are powerful gatekeepers and generate the bulk of creative and innovative ideas, while the majority is largely excluded. This book looks at neglected, but emerging innovation centres analysed from various spatial and organizational perspectives; ranging from entire countries and regions to individual firms and small neighbourhoods. Bringing together leading scholars from various disciplines, it examines a variety of economic sectors including biotechnology, agrotourism, and the food retail industry. The authors employ various, often contradictory, concepts, ranging from local buzz and the global pipeline, through an analysis of collective learning processes to geographical embeddedness, using both qualitative and quantitative approaches. The purpose of the book is twofold: investigating changes occurring in the regions and cities under transformation and attempting to find common and unique mechanisms behind these changes. Consequently, the authors shed light on the scale and scope of the innovativeness of selected economic and social processes.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

Innovation in Emerging Economic Spaces in the Context of the Local–Global Dichotomy

part II|120 pages

Large Firms and FDI

chapter 8|26 pages

Beyond Localness

Development Dimensions of the Niepołomice Investment Zone

part III|71 pages

Innovative Small Firms – Strategies and Behaviour

chapter 9|22 pages

Beyond a Creative Class Hotspot

Innovation in Independent and Corporate Coffee Shop Enterprises

chapter 10|20 pages

The Role of Creativity and Innovativeness of Firm Managers in Socio-economic Development

The Case of the Poznań Metropolitan Region

chapter 12|16 pages

Agricultural Tourism Farms in Poland

How the Farmers Improve their Businesses—A Case Study