Emerging tendencies in research policy call forth the cohesion–competitiveness dichotomy and implicitly advocate the hollowing out of cohesion objectives from future European Union (EU) research policy design. We trace the origins of this debate to the incomplete paradigm shift from the ‘mechanistic’ to the ‘systemic’ construal of technological change in policy discourse, manifest in the decisive influence the former still exercises on the objectives and instrumentalities of EU research policy. We look at some indications of this influence and we claim that they draw largely on reductionist conceptual schemes and sparse empirical evidence. We also examine the rationale for public intervention in the innovation process in two contrasting theoretical contexts, the neoclassical and the neo-Schumpeterian. We argue that the new tendencies in EU research policy stem from a mechanistic conception of cohesion and competitiveness as antagonistic notions and a normatively biased interpretation of neo-Schumpeterian arguments, and we scrutinise their inconsistencies.

PAGES
131 – 161
DOI
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Issues
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Automated plagiarism
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Generative artificial intelligence in qualitative analysis: a critical examination of tools, trust and rigor
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‘Foreignize yourself’. What has translation to do with innovation? A translation studies approach to hybrid innovation
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From tools to symbols: exploring the complex nexus of smartphones in Bangladesh
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Impoverishing peer review
Theoretical underpinnings and future directions of European Union research policy: a paradigm shift?
Research Papers