Abstract

Innovation systems are increasingly oriented towards the solution of societal and environmental problems. Social entrepreneurship can be regarded as a market-based actor, inherently aimed at finding solutions for these problems. The development of technologically advanced social entrepreneurship represents an outcome of problem-oriented innovation systems, requiring a closer link between social and technological innovation. Nonetheless, the literature has not yet explored a key element of these innovation systems: the technology transfer processes, which may enable social entrepreneurial organizations to act as innovation actors leveraging on technology. This paper investigates the relationship between the technology transfer processes targeting social entrepreneurship and different models of problem-oriented innovation ecosystems. The paper relies on a multiple-case-study design, including two problem-oriented innovation ecosystems in the Italian context, namely, MIND and Torino Social Impact, which are technology transfer projects designed to target social entrepreneurship. Drawing from content analysis of interviews, documents and direct observations, the results stress that the different objectives and contents of technology transfer, coupled with different perceptions of the idiosyncratic features of social entrepreneurship compared to commercial entrepreneurship, fit different ecosystem models in terms of the participating actors, governance and primary orientation to social or economic value generation.

Highlights

  • The objective of this study is to investigate which characteristics of problem-oriented innovation ecosystems enable different processes of technology transfer to social entrepreneurship

  • We explain the themes emerging from the cross-case analysis. They represent those features of an innovation ecosystem that favor the technology transfer process to a social enterprise

  • We explored the relationship between technology transfer processes for social entrepreneurship and the different characteristics of problem-oriented innovation ecosystems

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Summary

Introduction

Apollo Programs or Manhattan Project, appear to have been globally overcome by a new generation of innovation policies characterized by a broad transformative and socially constructivist character. In this perspective, grand-challenges-oriented innovation policies are directly linked to wider socio-technical transitions. Grand-challenges-oriented innovation policies are directly linked to wider socio-technical transitions They ask for a rethinking of the key theoretical constructs of innovation systems and ecosystems developed in the domain of innovation management and economics, toward a greater linkage between the societal and technological components of innovation processes and technological development

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