Erika Andersson Cederholm
Professor
Performing ambiguous policy : How innovation events simultaneously perform change and collaborative order
Author
Summary, in English
The aim of this article is to analyse how innovation policy is staged and legitimised through the dramatised social process of an event. The context is taken from an annual event, Skåne Innovation Week, which is arranged by the regional innovation system in Skåne, Sweden. Innovation systems often organise similar events internationally, which appear to play a key role in performing inter-organisational collaboration between actors from the public sector, industry and research, as well as manifesting belief in the globalised imaginaries of innovation systems. Through the analytical lens of the event as a social drama, the article examines how the event – and thus, innovation policy – is represented in commemorative films and website documents through which three meeting practices are identified: mingling and hanging out, scripted meeting models and spatial staging. The article argues that these meeting practices and their performed interactive social forms sustain the vagueness and ambiguity inherent in innovation policy, particularly between stability and change. The event can be viewed as a form of performative government that maintains a political order while simultaneously hailing its practices as transformative.
Department/s
- Department of Service Studies
Publishing year
2020-10-30
Language
English
Pages
1403-1419
Publication/Series
The Sociological Review
Volume
68
Issue
6
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Topic
- Sociology (excluding Social Work, Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)
Keywords
- ambiguity
- events
- performative government
- regional innovation system
- social drama
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0038-0261