Abstract

This article seeks enhanced understanding of the dynamics of open innovation and knowledge appropriation in African settings. More specifically, the authors focus on innovation and appropriation dynamics in African micro and small enterprises (MSEs), which are key engines of productivity on the continent. The authors begin by providing an expansion of an emergent conceptual framework for understanding intersections between innovation, openness and knowledge appropriation in African small-enterprise settings. Then, based on this framework, they review evidence generated by five recent case studies looking at knowledge development, sharing and appropriation among groups of small-scale African innovators. The innovators considered in the five studies were found to favour inclusive, collaborative approaches to development of their innovations; to rely on socially-grounded information networks when deploying and sharing their innovations; and to appropriate their innovative knowledge via informal (and, to a lesser extent, semi-formal) appropriation tools.

Highlights

  • The complex relationship between appropriation and innovation is being questioned across numerous disciplines

  • We provide a secondary account of findings from the two research endeavours we are aware of that have produced data relevant to this conceptual framework: the recent case studies of the Open African Innovation Research (Open AIR) network, and the recent work of the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) Development Agenda project on intellectual property (IP) and the Informal Economy (Open AIR, n.d.; WIPO, 2011)

  • 2 Findings from the Open AIR studies have been published by UCT Press in a volume, edited by De Beer, Armstrong, Oguamanam and Schonwetter, entitled Innovation and Intellectual Property: Collaborative Dynamics in Africa (De Beer et al, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

The complex relationship between appropriation and innovation is being questioned across numerous disciplines. KEYWORDS open innovation, collaborative dynamics, knowledge appropriation, access to knowledge (A2K), intellectual property (IP), micro and small enterprises (MSEs), informal sector, Africa

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