Suchergebnisse
6 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
State-society relations and urban art districts: The case of Angono, Philippines
In: City, Culture and Society, Band 15, S. 45-52
ISSN: 1877-9166
Urban innovation policy in the postdevelopmental era: Lessons from Singapore and Seoul
In: Asia & the Pacific policy studies, Band 5, Heft 3, S. 599-614
ISSN: 2050-2680
AbstractThis article examines the impact of policies for start‐up and entrepreneurship on the developmental model that remains a policy legacy in many Asian countries. The main argument is that the influence of central planning is deeply embedded in the institutions of the Four Asian Tigers, but globalisation and economic liberalisation are disrupting the old developmentalism by incentivising innovation and structural adaptability. In practice, although developmentalism once focused on infrastructure and industrial policy, softer strategies such as attracting educated millennials through urban amenities and creative clustering mimic those of the postindustrial West. Either this trend represents the end of developmentalism or top‐down industrial policy is being rebranded to embrace knowledge and service industries. This article examines this issue at the urban scale, examining policies used by Singapore and Seoul to encourage start‐ups and entrepreneurship in the context of innovation. Government documents are examined and findings compared.
Urban Innovation Policy in the Postdevelopmental Era: Lessons from Singapore and Seoul
In: Asia & the Pacific Policy Studies, Issue 3, Volume 5, pages 599-614
SSRN
Urban innovation policy in the postdevelopmental era : lessons from Singapore and Seoul
This article examines the impact of policies for start‐up and entrepreneurship on the developmental model that remains a policy legacy in many Asian countries. The main argument is that the influence of central planning is deeply embedded in the institutions of the Four Asian Tigers, but globalisation and economic liberalisation are disrupting the old developmentalism by incentivising innovation and structural adaptability. In practice, although developmentalism once focused on infrastructure and industrial policy, softer strategies such as attracting educated millennials through urban amenities and creative clustering mimic those of the postindustrial West. Either this trend represents the end of developmentalism or top‐down industrial policy is being rebranded to embrace knowledge and service industries. This article examines this issue at the urban scale, examining policies used by Singapore and Seoul to encourage start‐ups and entrepreneurship in the context of innovation. Government documents are examined and findings compared. ; Published version
BASE
Has China's Anti-Corruption Campaign Slowed Down Growth?
In: Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy Research Paper No. 17-29
SSRN
Working paper