The promises and premises of mission-oriented innovation policy: A reflection and ways forward

Publication date

2021-06-01

Authors

Janssen, MatthijsORCID 0000-0002-6788-511XISNI 0000000492899219
Torrens, JonasORCID 0000-0002-9991-7980ISNI 0000000479674250
Wesseling, Joeri H.ORCID 0000-0003-4648-5640ISNI 0000000419544788
Wanzenböck, IrisORCID 0000-0002-1727-5567ISNI 0000000492963030

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Article
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Abstract

Missions may be regarded as a narrative for challenge-oriented policies, as a rationale for directional policies, and as an instrument for coordinating distributed innovation efforts. While the attention for mission-oriented innovation policy is rising, there are still many questions regarding both the governance and the conduct of missions as well as the (adverse) effects they might have on innovation and societal challenges. This research perspective reflects on what missions are, what they can do and potentially engender, and how they can be studied empirically. Rather than a static, predetermined, and closed-off instrument, we contend that missions are best understood as continuously interacting with the structures and interests of governments, markets, and society, aligning (1) problem-based governance targeting societal challenges and (2) innovation governance targeting novelty creation and deployment. This characterisation of missions, as embedded and evolving, advances empirical questions that could guide research into unexplored directions.

Keywords

innovation policy, mission, societal challenge, transformation, Geography, Planning and Development, Public Administration, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law

Citation

Janssen, M J, Torrens, J C L, Wesseling, J & Wanzenböck, I 2021, 'The promises and premises of mission-oriented innovation policy : A reflection and ways forward', Science and Public Policy, vol. 48, no. 3, pp. 438-444. https://doi.org/10.1093/scipol/scaa072