Advanced Introduction to Innovation and Public Values
Edward Elgar Publishing
Published on 15. August 2025
Book
Hardback
158 pages
978-1-0353-2971-7 (ISBN)
Description
Elgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world's leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas.
This illuminating book explores how societies reshape themselves through innovation, reviewing methods for foreseeing, guiding and evaluating these changes. It demonstrates how a community can use shared goals and priorities to promote and pursue outcome-oriented public values innovation.
John Nelson and Barry Bozeman examine the impacts of innovation on public values such as economic prosperity and equity, national security, public health and safety, and environmental wellbeing. They discuss the positive and negative features of these impacts, including job creation and destruction, economic restructuring, shifting circumstances for conventional warfare and cyberattacks, and pollution output or remediation. The Advanced Introduction to Innovation and Public Values synthesizes existing social and policy scholarship into practical guidance, advocating for innovation that advances prosperity, health, and liberty for all citizens.
Key Features:
Articulates the novel concept of 'public values innovation' to assess the impact of innovation systems on public priorities
Outlines frameworks by which governments, corporations and civil society shape the aims, content and outcomes of innovation
Investigates the role of existing innovation systems, which run primarily through markets and private corporations, in shaping innovation outcomes-sometimes to public detriment
Students and scholars of organisational innovation, the economics of innovation, public policy and administration, engineering, and the sciences will greatly benefit from this insightful book. It is also an essential resource for policymakers and practitioners in public, private, and nonprofit innovation policy and management.
This illuminating book explores how societies reshape themselves through innovation, reviewing methods for foreseeing, guiding and evaluating these changes. It demonstrates how a community can use shared goals and priorities to promote and pursue outcome-oriented public values innovation.
John Nelson and Barry Bozeman examine the impacts of innovation on public values such as economic prosperity and equity, national security, public health and safety, and environmental wellbeing. They discuss the positive and negative features of these impacts, including job creation and destruction, economic restructuring, shifting circumstances for conventional warfare and cyberattacks, and pollution output or remediation. The Advanced Introduction to Innovation and Public Values synthesizes existing social and policy scholarship into practical guidance, advocating for innovation that advances prosperity, health, and liberty for all citizens.
Key Features:
Articulates the novel concept of 'public values innovation' to assess the impact of innovation systems on public priorities
Outlines frameworks by which governments, corporations and civil society shape the aims, content and outcomes of innovation
Investigates the role of existing innovation systems, which run primarily through markets and private corporations, in shaping innovation outcomes-sometimes to public detriment
Students and scholars of organisational innovation, the economics of innovation, public policy and administration, engineering, and the sciences will greatly benefit from this insightful book. It is also an essential resource for policymakers and practitioners in public, private, and nonprofit innovation policy and management.
Reviews / Votes
'An important exploration of the critical intersection between innovation and public values. This book challenges conventional thinking and offers a compelling framework for ensuring technology and innovation serve the greater good.' -- Maria Nedeva, University of Manchester, UK 'At last a contribution to the previously neglected issue of the relationship between innovation and public values! While innovations are generally introduced for "good" reasons, they often also have adverse consequences, not least increasing inequality. Nelson and Bozeman address this crucial issue.' -- Ben Martin, SPRU, University of Sussex, UK 'In this book, Nelson and Bozeman apply a public values perspective to the study of innovation and the design of innovation policies. The authors strongly argue that much current innovation does not advance public values, nor does it focus on the efforts that are needed to align innovation with social needs and values. By proposing a framework to develop public values innovation into a practical and actionable set of policies and strategies, this book goes well beyond an "advanced introduction". It presents the reader with a fundamental, timely and necessary guide to redefine innovation policies so that they can be knowingly oriented towards the benefit of society.' -- Jordi Molas-Gallart, INGENIO (CSIC-UPV), Spain 'The notion of "public values innovation" is a genuine conceptual innovation with huge political resonances. Against the dominant imaginary related to the Schumpeterian notion of creative destruction, innovation is not always good and its destructive part is not randomly distributed. Drawing on previous landmark contributions on public values and analyses of research impact, this is a key issue that Bozeman and Nelson address in a revolutionary way.' -- Pierre-Benoit Joly, INRAE Occitanie-Toulouse, FranceMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cheltenham
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-0353-2971-7 (9781035329717)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
John P. Nelson, Assistant Professor, School of Public Policy, Oregon State University and Barry Bozeman, Regents' Professor Emeritus and Arizona Centennial Professor of Technology Policy and Public Management, School of Public Affairs, Arizona State University, USA