Firm-Level Innovation In Africa

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absorptive capacity firms
African agriculture
African business
African countries' policy landscape
Agricultural Innovation Systems
agricultural mechanisation policy
agricultural mechanization
business constraints
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Category=KCM
Category=KJD
Community Innovation Survey Questionnaire
Dynamic Social Network Analysis
economic development
economic policy
empirical research African manufacturing
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Ethiopian Manufacturing
Ethiopian manufacturing sector
External Knowledge
External Knowledge Acquisition
Firm Spending
Firm's AC
Firm's Internal Knowledge Base
Firm's Product Innovation
firm-level innovation
Firm’s AC
Firm’s Internal Knowledge Base
Firm’s Product Innovation
Impacting Product Innovation
Innovate Persistently
innovation
Innovation and Development
innovation systems Africa
interactive learning processes
Internal Knowledge Base
International Knowledge Flows
Knowledge Acquisition
knowledge brokers intermediaries
Knowledge Spillovers
National Innovation System
OECD Country
Power Tillers
Predictive Margins
product innovation
PSM Result
System GMM
Technological Cycle Time
technology transfer sub-Saharan
World's Research Output
World’s Research Output

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138601611
  • Weight: 440g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Aug 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The literature on innovation in Africa is rapidly expanding, and a recurring thread in the emergent literature is the pervasiveness of systemic weaknesses that inhibit the innovation process. Despite these, firms are able to innovate in Africa. It is then logical to ask: how do African firms manage to overcome the prevalent constraints and learn to innovate?

This book directly tackles this question, with a view to improving our understanding of the innovation landscape in Africa. The book brings together some of the latest innovation research from across the African continent, ranging from Tanzania and Ethiopia in the east to Nigeria in the west. The chapters included in the collection adopt different but complementary theoretical and methodological approaches to address a rich mix of interrelated issues. These issues include the factors that enhance or inhibit innovation in African firms, the sources of (knowledge/information for) innovation, policy options for overcoming constraints and facilitating firm-level innovation, the nature and roles of brokers and intermediaries in dealing with innovation constraints and in facilitating the innovation process and the role of interactive learning and acquisition of embodied technology in the innovation process.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Innovation and Development.

Abiodun Egbetokun is the Head of the Science Policy and Innovation Studies Department of the National Centre for Technology Management, Ile-Ife, Nigeria. He holds a PhD in the Economics of Innovation from Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany. His research focuses mainly on the microeconomic sources and effects of innovation and entrepreneurship.

Richmond Atta-Ankomah is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research at the University of Ghana, Accra, Ghana. He also holds the position of Visiting Research Fellow with the Development Policy and Practice Unit of the Open University, Milton Keynes, UK. His research focuses on industrial development and firm-level innovation issues.

Oluseye Jegede is a Senior Researcher in the SARChI Industrial Development Unit in the College of Business and Economics at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. He holds a PhD in Technology Management. His main areas of research are science, technology and innovation policy, and economic development.

Edward Lorenz is a Professor of Economics at the University of Nice Sophia Antipolis, France and a member of the University of Côte d’Azur, France. He also holds the position of Assigned Professor at Aalborg University, Denmark. His work focuses on the comparative analysis of work organization and firm-level competency building in national innovation systems.