Managing Innovation Resources in Accordance with Sustainable Development Ethics: Typological Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Sustainability Crisis
1.2. Focusing on Long-Term Rationality
1.3. Previous Research
1.4. Research Outline
2. Methodology
2.1. Conceptual Design of Typological Analysis.
- Strategic environmental innovations (SEnI) are aimed at eradicating deep systemic causes of global environmental problems through the implementation and expansion of radical environmentally-oriented innovative technologies. Examples include: innovations in the sphere of clean energy, “free” or renewable energy sources, clean production technologies, non-waste production, and consumption cycles.
- Strategic social innovations (SSI) are intended to eliminate identifiable causes of global social problems through the implementation of radically innovative social technologies, thus transforming the basis of current social–economic systems, interactions, and relationships, and providing significant, steady humanization of societal systems. Examples include: innovations that increase the role of every human in social life and development, establishing priorities for individual and social collaborative development over money, profit, and competition; holistic systems of health-saving technologies; readily available, effective medicine, eliminating the causes of human illnesses and substantially improving human health, immune systems, life quality, and life expectancy; social, psychological, and educational innovations, which help people develop an active personality with free will, an extended mind, critical, logical, and systemic thinking, and the ability to find deep cause–effect relationships and to predict long-term effects; and social technologies that support innovators and innovations with high social significance.
- Strategic economic innovations (SEI) serve the purpose of solving systemic global economic problems, such as poverty, resource deficits, over-production, and over-consumption, and eliminate economic reasons for wars and catastrophe. SEIs improve the life quality of the whole society, recondition economic relationships between humans based on the premise that “the economic” serves “the social”, and not vice versa. The goals and means of SEI match the basic humanistic values and principles of a Steady-State Economy and their results significantly increase the integrated ecological, social, and economic wealth of society. Examples include: local currencies, collaborative and sharing economies, blockchain technology, and automation of unsafe and unhealthy production operations.
- Tactical environmental innovations (TEI) are designed to prevent the worst consequences of radical environmental problems and solve particular environmental problems without touching their deep causes or anthropogenic character. Examples include: innovative technologies for resource-saving production in particular industries; technologies that significantly decrease environmental pollution and environmental threats in mining industries and other unsafe production, and new methods and reagents for cleaning seas and oceans from oil and other pollution.
- Tactical social innovations (TSI) are aimed at preventing and solving significant social problems without radically eliminating their root causes. Examples include: new methods for developing tactical analytical thinking in the educational system; increasing the level of automation and computerization of manual and intellectual labor in existing workplaces, improving information and communication technologies and infrastructure; implementing effective mechanisms and systems supporting innovators who develop market-oriented and profitable innovations; developing health saving technologies, and curing and revitalizing medical technologies.
- Tactical economic innovations (TEI) provide significant mid-term economic SD effects. They are aimed at solving economic problems at the tactical level using innovative methods and instruments that are available in the framework of the current socio-economic system. Results of implementation of TEI slow down resource exhaustion, ease environmental problems, improve food safety, and increase economic prosperity. Examples include: innovations providing competitiveness of a particular territory; in particular, technologies that decrease resource consumption and increase availability of material welfare.
- Operative environmental innovations (OEnI) deal with the particular multi-layered implications of consequences associated with global climate change. They are new technologies or practices aimed at preserving threatened species, innovative methods of eliminating consequences of anthropogenic and natural catastrophes, along with innovations that help people adapt to unfavorable ecological conditions. Examples include: new technologies for cleaning water after oil spills, new materials for filtering potable water, and new technologies for building houses from plastic waste.
- Operative social innovations (OSI) are aimed at alleviating the most urgent social problems, which can be characterized as consequences of root social problems (non-effective and conflict mechanisms of the actual social–economic system). OSIs provide step-by-step improvements in social institutions and organizations within the framework of existing policies and processes. OSIs are mainly oriented towards profitable and short-term health policies and programs. Examples include: optimization of existing bureaucratic procedures; new medicines that cure symptoms more effectively or provide better pain relief; new ways of identifying people who need urgent psychological or financial aid; new psychological techniques that help people to overcome stress because of unemployment, gender, ethnicity, or income inequality.
- Operative economic innovations (OEI) imply new ways to create short-term profit maximization. Examples include: innovations that increase the effectiveness and scale of mining industries and existing forms of production; new technologies that increase the possibility of extract finite, non-renewable resources; and marketing innovations that boost consumption.
2.2. Materials and Methods
- (1)
- Classification of supported innovation projects according to their SD effects. Each project was allocated to the appropriate classification group according to their potential SD effects. An innovation project could be allocated to several classification groups if it implied different effects simultaneously, for example strategic environmental and tactical economic effects, or tactical social and operative environmental effects. Calculation of the number of innovation projects in each cell of the typological matrix for classification of sustainability-oriented innovation activities in two periods: 2009–2015 and 2016–2017 (Table 3).
- (2)
- Formalization of the typological analysis results in matrices consisting of absolute and relative values and visualization of the results.
- (3)
- Identification of supported innovation projects belonging to mining operations and the oil and gas industry.
- (4)
- Assessment of basic conditions for an effective sustainability-oriented innovation support system on the basis of typological analysis, including comparison of typological matrices by time periods (2009–2015 and 2016–2017).
- (5)
- Development of recommendations on which transformations in decision making policy are necessary to significantly increase the innovation system’s potential impact on achieving wider SD goals.
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
5.1. Recommendations
5.2. Research Implications
5.3. Limitations and Further Research Development
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Typological Characteristics | Types of Innovations by the Scale of SD Effects | ||
---|---|---|---|
Strategic | Tactical | Operative | |
The level and complexity of innovations’ effects | System transformative effects | Some integrative effects | Immediate single effects |
The quality of problem solution | Eradicating the radical SD problems through eliminating their causes | Preventing some consequences of SD problems (or derivative SD problems) | Alleviating consequences of SD problems |
The extent of influencing the problem situation | Radical societal transition to SD path | Noticeable improvement of the global situation in SD context | Insignificant surface improvements |
Time frames of effects | Long-term | Mid-term | Short-term |
The scale of SD Innovation Effects | SD Ethics Dimensions | ||
---|---|---|---|
Environmental | Social | Economic | |
Strategic | Strategic environmental innovations (SEnI) | Strategic social innovations (SSI) | Strategic economic innovations (SEI) |
Tactical | Tactical environmental innovations (TEnI) | Tactical social innovations (TSI) | Tactical economic innovations (TEI) |
Operative | Operative environmental innovations (OEnI) | Operative social innovations (OSI) | Operative economic innovations (OEI) |
SD Ethics Dimensions | The Scale of SD Innovation Effects | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Environmental | Social | Economic | ||||
2009–2015 | 2016–2017 | 2009–2015 | 2016–2017 | 2009–2015 | 2016–2017 | |
Strategic | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
Tactical | 13 | 4 | 2 | 8 | 14 | 9 |
Operative | 2 | 9 | 1 | 15 | 14 | 39 |
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Ljovkina, A.O.; Dusseault, D.L.; Zaharova, O.V.; Klochkov, Y. Managing Innovation Resources in Accordance with Sustainable Development Ethics: Typological Analysis. Resources 2019, 8, 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8020082
Ljovkina AO, Dusseault DL, Zaharova OV, Klochkov Y. Managing Innovation Resources in Accordance with Sustainable Development Ethics: Typological Analysis. Resources. 2019; 8(2):82. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8020082
Chicago/Turabian StyleLjovkina, Anastasia O., David L. Dusseault, Olga V. Zaharova, and Yury Klochkov. 2019. "Managing Innovation Resources in Accordance with Sustainable Development Ethics: Typological Analysis" Resources 8, no. 2: 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8020082
APA StyleLjovkina, A. O., Dusseault, D. L., Zaharova, O. V., & Klochkov, Y. (2019). Managing Innovation Resources in Accordance with Sustainable Development Ethics: Typological Analysis. Resources, 8(2), 82. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8020082