No Interaction, No Problem? An Investigation of Organizational Issues in the University–Industry–Government Triad in a Transition Economy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Research Background
2.1. Triple Helix Model of Innovation
2.2. Variations in Triple Helix Due to Institutional and Organizational Factors
2.3. Triple Helix Barriers in Developing Countries and Post-Soviet Geography
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Research Strategy and Case Selection
3.2. Data Collection and Analysis
3.3. Research Context
4. Analysis
4.1. Centralized Innovation System
“Most of our projects happen with the initiative of the government. At least in our context, from the three organizations you mentioned, the government has a larger role”.(HEI-9)
“Well, indeed, government leads. I think there always should be a leading actor. There are global examples. Take China; their research is world-class, and the state leads all the processes”.(EXP-5)
4.2. The Organizational Culture Issues
“It is not a long time ago that we all were employed in the government. I am talking about the Soviet Union. When the Union was dismantled, some remained in government offices, some went to universities, and some started their own businesses. Of course, those who went to university and business took the philosophy of the state there with them. It is no coincidence that even today, you can hear young employees referring to people in the workplace who are very conservative as ‘Soviet men’. This might remain as a nickname, however, this nickname is given to an approach”.(IND-4)
“Besides my current position in the ministry, at the moment, I am a part-time instructor at a university. I don’t see any difference between these organizations when it comes to the way both execute day-to-day operations”.(GOV-7)
“It has been more than thirty years since our independence, and I have been in the consulting business for almost two decades. Our middle-size firms have especially started to fully adopt market principles in the last ten years. Previously, I have heard this a lot: we’ll set the price as low as we can and will not care about the rest, and people will buy the products we produce. This was exactly the same mentality within the Soviet state-owned enterprises. Hit the targets and don’t care about the quality. […] Even today, we have much to do in business functions such as marketing, R&D, and quality control […]”.(EXP-4)
“Our past, especially our experience with the Soviet Union, affects the way that our institutions operate and interact today. We must break this path. Otherwise, the ‘Where is our Silicon Valley?’ question will remain topical for Azerbaijan in the following decades”.(EXP-10)
“A mediator mechanism beyond some outdated endogenous practices of each organization is necessary to establish a working innovation system. Otherwise, these endogeneities will continue to incarcerate the interactions with solid boundaries”.(EXP-1)
“When we say research in Azerbaijan, everyone will understand it as writing and publishing a paper. Researchers don’t think about commercialization or the practical implications of their research. I think this is partly attributable to the environment that they work. We need more encouraging ecosystems, this can stimulate mutual learning as well”.(HEI-8)
4.3. Interaction Issues
4.3.1. Hierarchy
“Why can we not train our own engineers and experts? The answer partially lies in bureaucracy. It prevents undertaking result-oriented activities”.(HEI-1)
“Sometimes contacts happen in the academia-industry-government triangle, but I don’t know whether we can define it as interaction”.(HEI-2)
“There is an obvious problem in interacting with other organizations, even for the basic things”.(IND-6)
“We [universities] are subordinate to the Ministry in launching new programs. Most of the time, they are not considering our request for the programs but opening entirely different ones”.(HEI-6)
“The roots of the problems regarding knowledge generation and dissemination in Azerbaijan can be traced back to the USSR. The serious influence of the experience left over from the Soviet Union is actual today. Some formal and informal traditions even continue today”.(HEI-7)
“Every organization has its own culture and internal practices that accumulated over decades. The government is embroiled in bureaucracy, the private sector acts for its own sake, and the universities are governed like administrative organizations. These realities prevent effective communication”.(GOV-10)
4.3.2. Insufficiency
“Apart from one or two universities, resources are not coordinated towards investment in human capital and other value-added capabilities”.(GOV-11)
“Incompetent human resources exist in almost every organization. Especially in the complex tasks, the result of the work they are performing is a failure”.(EXP-3)
“[T]he majority of the labor force does not meet modern requirements in the labor market”.(GOV-11)
“Global competition is based on technology nowadays. Artificial intelligence or biotechnology with current human resources? No, it is too far for us”.(IND-5)
4.3.3. Misconception
“In fact, universities cannot train personnel. The organization I lead needs engineers. While hundreds graduate from the engineering faculties every year, I can’t find human resources with the required skills”.(IND-1)
“Innovation, entrepreneurship, these are matters of creativity, worldview, knowledge, and experience, of course. In the Soviet times, there was no such profession as called ‘entrepreneur’. It was an element of capitalism, and we had our communist norms. However, in one night, everything had changed, we were supposed to produce innovative products and ideas”.(IND-13)
“They [private sector] think that a new university graduate shall be fully competent and experienced to solve all the work-related tasks. It is simply impossible”.(HEI-4)
“The private sector simply has no belief that interacting with universities can give them something monetizable”.(HEI-14)
“We have talented researchers, but again, certain stereotypes build a wall on them”.(EXP-2)
“Specific stereotypes regarding each organization also play a role in hindering relations, which can generate and diffuse knowledge”.(EXP-3)
“Sparse institutionalization brings distrust”.(EXP-8)
“Universities are not treated as serious organizations; their graduates are not considered competent, and even their research results with some potential are neglected. It discourages future endeavours and preserves status-quo”.(EXP-16)
“Yes, there is an incompetent segment in the labor market. But do we even fully utilize the competent ones?”.(EXP-9)
“In the sense of university-government-industry relations, a new graduate can remain unemployed due to failure in coordination even though relevant jobs exit. This stimulates brain drain”.(GOV-8)
4.4. Systemic Failure
“We have global innovation indexes on hand, and obviously, they are not satisfactory. I think we can do a lot better than that. We have to somehow identify why our outputs are lower than inputs. If we answer this question, we’ll also handle failures”.(HEI-3)
“I believe rather than working particularly on organizations, we have to work on ecosystems. In my view, the basic ‘demand-supply’ relations could help us to move beyond failures. I mean, if there is, say, a startup ecosystem, firms will invest in them and demand universities to provide knowledge and human resources. Universities will start to compete and even could ask for more funding to enhance their performances. Consequently, all these organizations will be stakeholders in that startup ecosystem. Otherwise, every organization will continue to act on its own with inertia, and the government will again be obliged to coordinate all in terms of innovation”.(EXP-9)
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Recommendations for Future Research and Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Themes Subthemes | Representative Quotes |
---|---|
Centralized Innovation System | |
“I would say the government is the dominant actor in the academia-industry government relations.” (GOV-4). “Well, indeed, government leads. I think there always should be a leading actor. There are global examples. Take China; their research is world-class, and the state leads all the processes” (EXP-5) “Most of our projects happen with the initiative of the government. At least in our context, from the three organizations you mentioned, the government has a larger role” (HEI-9) | |
Organizational Culture Issues | |
State-like mimetic Institutionalization | “It is not a long time ago that we all were employed in the government. I am talking about the Soviet Union. When the Union was dismantled, some remained in government offices, some went to universities, and some started their own businesses. Of course, those who went to university and business took the philosophy of the state there with them. It is no coincidence that even today, you can hear young employees referring to people in the workplace who are very conservative as ‘Soviet men’. This might remain as a nickname, however, this nickname is given to an approach” (IND-4). “Besides my current position in the ministry, at the moment, I am a part-time instructor at a university. I don’t see any difference between these organizations when it comes to the way both execute day-to-day operations” (GOV-7) |
Intra-organizational residuals of the past | “It has been more than thirty years since our independence, and I have been in the consulting business for almost two decades. Our middle-size firms have especially started to fully adopt market principles in the last ten years. Previously, I have heard this a lot: we’ll set the price as low as we can and will not care about the rest, and people will buy the products we produce. This was exactly the same mentality within the Soviet state-owned enterprises. Hit the targets and don’t care about the quality. […] Even today, we have much to do in business functions such as marketing, R&D, and quality control […]” (EXP-4) |
“Our past, especially our experience with the Soviet Union, affects the way that our institutions operate and interact today. We must break this path. Otherwise, the ‘Where is our Silicon Valley?’ question will remain topical for Azerbaijan in the following decades.” (EXP-10) | |
Interaction Issues | |
Hierarchy | “Why can we not train our own engineers and experts? The answer partially lies in bureaucracy. It prevents undertaking result-oriented activities” (HEI-1) “We [universities] are subordinate to the Ministry in launching new programs. Most of the time, they are not considering our request for the programs but opening entirely different ones” (HEI-6). “Every organization has its own culture and internal practices that accumulated over decades. The government is embroiled in bureaucracy, the private sector acts for its own sake, and the universities are governed like administrative organizations. These realities prevent effective communication” (GOV-10) “[T]here is a clear coordination problem, which affects the capability-building process of all relevant organizations” (IND-3) |
Insufficiency | “The condition of the workplace in terms of equipment is not satisfactory. Our computers do not fully meet modern requirements. We do not have access to international databases”. (HEI-7) “Which private company needs science or innovation in Azerbaijan? …[T]he capacity of our private sector is minimal” (HEI-13) “Universities, for instance, are stuck to the inertia and continue to operate on this basis. As a result, human capital prepared by the university is not meeting the expectations” (GOV-12) “Global competition is based on technology nowadays. Artificial intelligence or biotechnology with current human resources? No, it is too far for us” (IND-5) |
Misconception | “In fact, universities cannot train personnel. The organization I lead needs engineers. While hundreds graduate from the engineering faculties every year, I can’t find human resources with the required skills”. (IND-1) “They [private sector] think that a new university graduate shall be fully competent and experienced to solve all the work-related tasks. It is simply impossible” (HEI-4) “Yes, there is an incompetent segment in the labor market. But do we even fully utilize the competent ones?” (EXP-9) |
Systemic failure | |
“We have global innovation indexes on hand, and obviously, they are not satisfactory. I think we can do a lot better than that. We have to somehow identify why our outputs are lower than inputs. If we answer this question, we’ll also handle failures” (HEI-3) “I believe rather than working particularly on organizations, we have to work on ecosystems. In my view, the basic ‘demand-supply’ relations could help us to move beyond failures. I mean, if there is, say, a startup ecosystem, firms will invest in them and demand universities to provide knowledge and human resources. Universities will start to compete and even could ask for more funding to enhance their performances. Consequently, all these organizations will be stakeholders in that startup ecosystem. Otherwise, every organization will continue to act on its own with inertia, and the government will again be obliged to coordinate all in terms of innovation” (EXP-9) |
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Landoni, M.; Muradzada, N. No Interaction, No Problem? An Investigation of Organizational Issues in the University–Industry–Government Triad in a Transition Economy. Adm. Sci. 2024, 14, 246. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14100246
Landoni M, Muradzada N. No Interaction, No Problem? An Investigation of Organizational Issues in the University–Industry–Government Triad in a Transition Economy. Administrative Sciences. 2024; 14(10):246. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14100246
Chicago/Turabian StyleLandoni, Matteo, and Nijat Muradzada. 2024. "No Interaction, No Problem? An Investigation of Organizational Issues in the University–Industry–Government Triad in a Transition Economy" Administrative Sciences 14, no. 10: 246. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14100246
APA StyleLandoni, M., & Muradzada, N. (2024). No Interaction, No Problem? An Investigation of Organizational Issues in the University–Industry–Government Triad in a Transition Economy. Administrative Sciences, 14(10), 246. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci14100246