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Higher Education Institutions and tourism destination development A challenge for triple-helix policies? Lise Smed Olsen – lise.smed.olsen@nordregio.se Henrik Halkier– halkier@cgs.aau.dk 1. The challenge: Triple-helix in a different environment 2. Research design: Explorative case studies 3. Results: Nordland and North Jutland 4: Conclusions: Diversity and intermediaries
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The challenge: TRIPLE HELIX IN A NEW ENVIRONMENT From a high-tech manufacturing concept… Interaction between firms and public/private knowledge producers Informal institutional context and organised interaction Triple helix: Universities/government/industry with overlapping roles Wide appeal among policy-makers … to a high-touch service context SMEs, low education, seasonality, life-style entrepreneurs Importance of tacit knowledge in incremental innovation What role for HEIs/universities in tourist destination development? Importance of destination and HEI characteristics! Lise Smed Olsen – lise.smed.olsen@nordregio.se Henrik Halkier– halkier@cgs.aau.dk
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RESEARCH DESIGN Two case studies of Nordic peripheral regions Nordland, Norway North Jutland, Denmark Interviews with policy-makers and HEIs, not firms Identify patterns of collaboration, not impact evaluation Focus on Actor resources Actors strategies Interaction patterns Lise Smed Olsen – lise.smed.olsen@nordregio.se Henrik Halkier– halkier@cgs.aau.dk
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NORDLAND Coordinated research and development? Actor resources Nature-based tourism, small private firms dominate National funding for R&D (InnovationNorway, Research Council) University with general teaching programmes and applied research Actor strategies Firms: select few interest in access to HEI knowledge HEI: from student projects to applied research centre DMO marginal, region with geo-political concerns Interactions Feed-back loop from research to firms via project manager Lise Smed Olsen – lise.smed.olsen@nordregio.se Henrik Halkier– halkier@cgs.aau.dk
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NORTH JUTLAND Arm’s-length project interaction? Actor resources Nature-based tourism, small private firms dominate Regional funding via DMO University with triple-helix profile and dedicated tourism profile Actor strategies Firms: Limited interest, except very large/innovative HEI: empirical data and dual publication (dissemination, academic) DMO: building consortia, translating/endorsing knowledge Interactions HEI as plug-in in DMO projects (occasionally proactive agenda) Lise Smed Olsen – lise.smed.olsen@nordregio.se Henrik Halkier– halkier@cgs.aau.dk
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CONCLUSIONS Importance of education/labour market relations in knowledge dynamics Funding: National versus regional Agenda setting: HEI versus DMO Important commonality: Importance of knowledge brokers Translation taking tacit knowledge of firms into consideration Importance of destination and HEI characteristics What firms, DMOs, and HEIs? Several types of tourism triple helix Lise Smed Olsen – lise.smed.olsen@nordregio.se Henrik Halkier– halkier@cgs.aau.dk
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