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9th-10th September 2004
University of Manchester, Manchester,
England, UK.
Conference Aims | Paper Abstracts & Deadlines | Programme | Times and Organisation | Conference Fees | Accommodation | Further Information | Booking Form
The conference is organised jointly by the ESRC NEXSUS Network, Cranfield University and the ESRC Centre for Research in Innovation and Competition, University of Manchester. It will be held at the Harold Hankins Building, University of Manchester.
The Purpose of the conference is to explore the concept of the knowledge economy from a complexity perspective, with a particular emphasis on the emergence of innovation and the self-organisation and self-transformation of economic systems. The broad themes will include Conceptual thinking; Modelling/Simulation and Empirical/Case Studies.
The ideas that come from Complexity and Complex Systems Science provide a new basis for our understanding of how innovations occur and the strong relation with the mechanisms that can create knowledge in new dimensions and lead to economic transformation. These new ideas clearly underlie recent developments in Evolutionary Economics, and the notion of “Restless Capitalism” whereby business conjectures are constantly generated and either fail and disappear or invade and change the system. The questions of how business conjectures are generated, and how organisational forms can either help or hinder the process are of great practical importance, and during the meeting practical examples and case studies will be presented. Equally important are the market and non-market institutions of capitalism that shape and stimulate the emergence of novelty. Essentially, there is an important link between the internal diversity and richness of the internal worlds of people in such systems and their ability to generate novel and innovative ideas. Systems that deny the freedom to be enterprising may attain high efficiencies at a point in time yet loose out in the longer term to more creative systems. Conversely systems that are too weakly ordered deny the possibility of effective experimentation. To some degree there must be a “denial” of, or freedom from, current knowledge in order to step onto a new path, and so people and organisations in which such events occur are very important. This focuses us on the issue of the generative capacities of encounters between diverse individuals, whether in firms or markets or other contexts, and of innovation occurring “at the interfaces” of organisations, and on inter organisational innovation. These are all key domains that are illuminated by the ideas coming from complexity.
Some of the questions that focus on this set of issues are:
Abstracts (no longer than an A4 page) should be sent to: Rosemary Cockfield, rosemary.cockfield@cranfield.ac.uk by 31st July, 2004.
Subject to acceptance of the abstract, deadline for full papers 16th August, 2004.
Paper abstracts are now available.
The Conference will begin at lunchtime on Thursday 9th September and finish late afternoon on Friday 10th September, 2004 at the CRIC Conference Suite, Harold Hankins Building.
A conference dinner will be held on the evening of the 9th September.
See Booking Form for more details.
For more information contact:
Rosemary Cockfield, rosemary.cockfield@cranfield.ac.uk
Complex Systems Research Centre,
Cranfield University,
Bedford, MK43 OAL,
UK
Tel: +44 1234 754801
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