DOI QR코드

DOI QR Code

Fukuoka Next-generation Social System Creation Hub as a Regional Innovation Platform Strategy

  • Received : 2018.10.19
  • Accepted : 2018.12.14
  • Published : 2018.12.26

Abstract

The purpose of this article is to introduce and describe the case of Fukuoka Next-generation Social System Creation Hub based on the conceptual framework of regional innovation platform strategy. In short, it is a "government-issued" regional innovation platform strategy to improve innovativeness with limited creative capital through "borrowing" not money but network, wisdom, know-how, and ideas from each other between some stakeholder groups in a region. The Fukuoka Industry, Science & Technology Foundation, which is the coordinating institution of the whole program, plays the role of a platformer to unify various projects into the program crossing borders between stakeholder groups for building regional innovation platforms that lends intensive support to feedback loops between the program facilitator and its partners in the program. Thanks to being a government-issued one, it could be tied together with some wide ranging issues of policy on social innovations, such as the "low carbon society" or the "health and longevity society." But at the same time, it is a concern that many regional research institutions that have innovative potential and diverse ideas become governed by the platform without their noticing it and dealt with in the same way based on "selected" and "designated" strategic goals. Therefore, it seems that a regional innovation platform strategy is a kind of "double-edged sword" in public policy in the era of "panopticism of bureaucratic society" in Japan.

Keywords

References

  1. Cha, S.-R. (2006) "Sustainable Development of Science City on High-tech Cluster in Its Historical, Spatial and Policy-relevant Context: the Case of Kitakyushu City, Japan," in Proceedings of the UNESCO-WTA International Training Workshop on High-tech Clusters in Global Context, UNESCO-WTA Cooperative Project, pp.359-408.
  2. Cha, S.-R. (2008) "Towards Creative Growth of Innovative Cluster: Experience and Vista Gained from Clustered Development of IT Industry in Two Japanese Peripheral Cities," in Proceedings of the UNESCO-WTA International Training Workshop on Towards Creative Growth of Science Park and Innovative Cluster, UNESCO-WTA Cooperative Project, pp.179-209.
  3. Cha, S.-R. (2011) "Building STP's Ecosystem: the Kitakyushu Approach," in Proceedings of the UNESCO-WTA International Training Workshop on Science & Technology Park-INNOVATION ECOSYSTEM, UNESCO-WTA Cooperative Project, pp.63-97.
  4. Cha, S.-R. (2012) "The Present State of the Japan's Cluster Programs," in Proceedings of the UNESCO-WTA International Training Workshop on Valorization: Tangible benefits from S&T parks, UNESCO-WTA Cooperative Project, pp.289-294.
  5. Fukuoka Innovation Promotion Council (2014) Development and promotion of new growth industries by social-needs-directed development: Aiming at the formation of one of the premier innovation bases in the world (the Brochure of Fukuoka Next-Generation Social System Creation Hub, Regional innovation strategy support program by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT)).
  6. Fukuoka Institute of System LSI Design Industry. Accessed on 27 August 2015 from http://www.ist.or.jp/lsi/pg02_01.html [in Japanese]
  7. Foucault, M. (1975) Discipline and Punish: the Birth of the Prison, New York: Random House.
  8. Hirano, A. K., and Hagiu, A. (2010) The Multi-sided Platform Strategy, Tokyo: TOYO KEIZAI Inc. [In Japanese]
  9. MEXT (2012) Regional Innovation Strategy Support Program (the program brochure).
  10. Ohmae, K. (2001) The Invisible Continent: Four Strategic Imperatives of the New Economy, New York: Harper Business.