Setting contextual conditions to resolve grand challenges through responsible innovation: A comparative patent analysis in the circular economy
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Circular economy Grand challenges Hybrid organization Patent productivity R&D environment Responsible innovation
Date
2023-01-27Referencia bibliográfica
Liu, Yipeng... [et al.] 2023. “ Setting Contextual Conditions to Resolve Grand Challenges through Responsible Innovation: A Comparative Patent Analysis in the Circular Economy.” Journal of Product Innovation Management 1– 24. [https://doi.org/10.1111/jpim.12659]
Sponsorship
Governments of Spain and Andalusia, Grant/Award Number: A-SEJ-196-UGR20; Schoeller Foundation; Taishan Scholar Program of Shandong ProvinceAbstract
This article draws on responsible innovation (RI) undertaken by hybrid organizations,
institutional rigidity, and national innovation systems (NISs) to assess
and contextualize the innovation performance of for-profit firms seeking to
resolve grand challenges (GCs). The extant research on RI lacks the theoretical
underpinnings to profile the unique characteristics of RI firms and the contextual
conditions behind the resolution of GCs through RI. This study aims to fill
this important gap by focusing on a specific type of RI firm—a firm seeking to
reduce climate change through implementation of a circular economy model.
By studying a multi-country sample of 1153 manufacturing firms, we implemented
propensity score matching (PSM) and the Heckman selection model to
compare the patent productivity of RI and non-RI firms. Our evidence demonstrates
that RI firms display lower likelihood of patenting and lower patent
productivity than non-RI firms when they do engage in patenting. Furthermore,
we found that a stronger national R&D environment can be conducive
to aligning public interests and private incentives by enabling RI firms to
enhance their patent productivity. Additionally, RI firms in industries with
lower levels of technological complexity capture more value from improvements
in R&D environments than RI firms in industries with higher levels of
technological complexity. Our argument as a whole contributes to the GC and
RI literature streams by considering both the innovation barriers faced by RIoriented
firms and the macro/industry boundary conditions that enable such
organizations to overcome them.