Science and Technology Policy Research
SPRU
|
Established |
1966 (1966) |
Type |
Public |
Founder |
Christopher Freeman |
Location |
Freeman Centre
Brighton
UK |
Staff |
70 |
Publication |
Research Policy |
Focus |
Policy, Management |
Former Name |
Science Policy Research Unit |
Functions |
Research, Teaching, Consultancy |
Website |
SPRU |
Science and Technology Policy Research (SPRU) is an academic centre at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK. Founded in 1966, SPRU specialises in science, technology and innovation studies for policy and management. It was called the Science Policy Research Unit, but the name has been changed to reflect expansion of research interests. It is the largest institution for science, technology and innovation (STI) studies in the world[1].
SPRU's research focuses on gaining an understanding of and developing approaches to the governance of science, technology and innovation that influence academia, policy-making, and management. Researchers' electronic working papers, books and journals[2] demonstrate the interdisciplinary approach historically related to SPRU.
Publications are kept in the Keith Pavitt Library, along with 40,000 other materials on science, technology and innovation studies[3]. SPRU is located in the Freeman Centre, an open architecture building.
Teaching
SPRU offers postgraduate degrees (MSc, MPhil, DPhil) in Technology and Innovation Management, Public Policies for Science and Technology and Innovation, and Science and Technology for Sustainability.
Scholars at SPRU are international and multidisciplinary. They have backgrounds from economics, political science, business and management, history, philosophy as well as natural science and engineering.
Research
Science and technology systems
- Realignment of international, national and regional innovation systems
- Measuring and assessing knowledge production and distribution
- Science and technology for development in diverse globalising economies
- New developments in university-industry-government relationships
- Network dynamics in advanced research systems (eg. nano-science, information and communication technologies)
- The relationship between publicly funded research and economic performance
[4]
Innovation in firms and industry
- Strategy, structure and dynamics of innovating firms and industrial systems
- Managing innovation capabilities in firms, industries and public policy
- Research and technological change in high-tech industries (eg. areas of nanotechnology, biomedical research and information technology)[5]
- Understanding and harnessing distributed and user innovation
- Managing uncertainty in complex integrated infrastructures
- Innovation in services
- The role of intellectual property
- Systems Integration[6] for managing complex products and systems
[7]
Governance and sustainability
- Transitions to sustainable energy futures (Sussex Energy Group)[8]
- Global sustainable technology pathways (STEPS Centre)[9]
- Governance of weapons of mass destruction (Harvard Sussex Program)[10]
- Convergence between foresight and precaution in risk regulation
- Analytic and participation frameworks for appraising new technologies
[11]
Expanding areas
- Improving indicators of scientific, technical and environmental performance
- The management of innovation in firms, industries and countries
- Developing practical ways for dealing with new risks and uncertainties
- New perspectives on biomedical systems especially genetics/genomics[12]
- Emerging technologies (space & satellite navigation, biotechnology, nanotechnology, etc)
- The role of networks in innovation[13]
- Evolutionary economics
- Financial innovation[14]
- Science and technology for development
- Entrepreneurship in science and technology[13]
- Economics of knowledge
[15]
Methods
Notable people
References
External links
Business schools in the United Kingdom
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