Hardback
Technology, Development and Democracy
Limits of National Innovation Systems in the Age of Postmodernism
9781858985947 Edward Elgar Publishing
How can developing nations achieve cohesive national innovation systems which provide the foundations for technological progress and economic growth? In answer to this question, Technology, Development and Democracy examines the possibility of studying innovation systems using a unified approach drawing on economic, political, sociological and cultural factors and addresses the problematic concept of progress in the postmodern era.
More Information
Critical Acclaim
Contents
More Information
How can developing nations achieve cohesive national innovation systems which provide the foundations for technological progress and economic growth? In answer to this question, Technology, Development and Democracy examines the possibility of studying innovation systems using a unified approach drawing on economic, political, sociological and cultural factors and addresses the problematic concept of progress in the postmodern era.
Haider Khan expresses the search for high technology as the search for ‘positive feedback loop innovation systems’ (POLIS). In the first part of the book the conditions for POLIS are explored both in theory and using empirical evidence. The author examines the theoretical arguments which describe an innovation system as a complex and uncertain evolutionary process. He uses empirical evidence to illustrate these arguments and examines whether South Korea’s pursuit of high technology has led to the creation of a ‘positive feedback loop innovation system’. The second part of the book extends the analysis of the economics of POLIS and discusses the implications of high technology systems for the polity and society at large. It also pursues some of the normative issues raised by high technology, particularly the relationship between economy and democracy.
Technology, Development and Democracy will be invaluable to students and academics with an interest in economic development, technological change and political economy.
Haider Khan expresses the search for high technology as the search for ‘positive feedback loop innovation systems’ (POLIS). In the first part of the book the conditions for POLIS are explored both in theory and using empirical evidence. The author examines the theoretical arguments which describe an innovation system as a complex and uncertain evolutionary process. He uses empirical evidence to illustrate these arguments and examines whether South Korea’s pursuit of high technology has led to the creation of a ‘positive feedback loop innovation system’. The second part of the book extends the analysis of the economics of POLIS and discusses the implications of high technology systems for the polity and society at large. It also pursues some of the normative issues raised by high technology, particularly the relationship between economy and democracy.
Technology, Development and Democracy will be invaluable to students and academics with an interest in economic development, technological change and political economy.
Critical Acclaim
‘This interesting book addresses the implications of a modern technology system for economic development and examines questions regarding the role of advanced technologies in creating post-modern conditions in developing societies.’
– Aslib Book Guide
– Aslib Book Guide
Contents
Contents: Preface 1. Introduction: Technology, Complexity and Postmodernism 2. Technology, Growth and Increasing Returns 3. Technological Complexity, Uncertainty and POLIS 4. Technology Systems, Social Accounting Matrices and the Evolution intoPOLIS 5. South Korea: an Economy in search of a POLIS Part II – Beyond the Economics of POLIS 6. The Sorcerer’s Apprentice? Technology, Democracy and Development in the Age of Postmodernism 7. Technology, Democracy and Global Justice in the McWorld: Can we put the Genie back into the bottle? 8. Conclusions: Towards a Brave New World? Bibliography