Synopsis: Actor: Actor:


Science.PublicPolicyVol39\3. Coping with a fast-changing world.pdf

Designing research policy and strategy with broad aim of selecting priorities for research investments and cooperation of R&i actors.


Science.PublicPolicyVol39\4. Orienting international science cooperation to meet global ‘grand challenges’.pdf

and become increasingly complex as non-state actors influence the international political and policy agenda.


Science.PublicPolicyVol39\5. Innovation policy roadmapping as a systemic instrument for forward-looking.pdf

IPRM is targeted also at the systemic level of multiple actors and organizations. Thus, this visionary process includes many participants and different interests.

First, foresight provides actors with informatiio and signals outside the immediate environment and helps to identify potential threats and opportunities.

reorienttin the science and innovation system, demonstrating the vitality of the science and innovation system, bringing new actors into the strategic debate,

and broadening the range of actors engaged in science and innovation policy. Weber et al. 2009: 955) argue that policy processes have gone through a conceptual shift in

actor assemblages, enabling technologies and related infrastrucctures a temporal scope of the system (e g. what is short-term,

Secondly, TM accentuates the interrelatedness of societal and technological systems and the multiplicity of actors.

and development activities realized by multiple actors. A joint vision can direct these interlinked activities towards joint goals

the system could refer to an entity consisting of different actors, for example, in the health value network and the regulatory context of this network,

yet in some cases the market development and actors play more imporrtan roles. In the first level, technology-based solutions, specific developments of technological solutions are depicted on a level that is assessed as necessary.

The fourth potenntia level is capabilities, resources and actors. At this level, the technology is set in its immediate societal context.

Actors refer to the individuals, organizations and institutions that are perceived as important in the development of the technology.

processes and resourrces New solutions need to be negotiated within a large network of actors and thus risk aversion predominates.

segments, geography Capabilities, resources, actors (CRA) CRA developments 2 CRA developments 3 CRA developments 4 Figure 2. Generic structure of technology roadmap.

In the market, this trajectory calls for new types of actors, system and subsystem integrators.

Policies for lifecycle efficient production ACTOR-ORIENTED POLICIES: Policies to enable voluntary citizen actions on environmentally sustainable ICT;

The second set of policies is oriented actor policies. The first of these is to enable voluntary citizen actions on environmmentall sustainable ICT,


Science.PublicPolicyVol39\6. Embedding foresight in transnational research programming.pdf

and of research infrastructure planning with these programmmes The participation of the actors in research systems in a foresight process may also promote transparennc


Science.PublicPolicyVol39\8. Facing the future - Scanning, synthesizing and sense-making in horizon scanning.pdf

At the individual level, sense-making builds on the actor's ability to perceive, interpret and construct the meaning of the emerging landscape (du Toit 2003;


Science.PublicPolicyVol39\9. Fraunhofer future markets.pdf

Therefore, every research organisation and every actor in the innovation system has to position itself or himself in 236.

As Fraunhofer is one of the largest actors in the European system, it is obvious that its headquarters had to act to position the Fraunhofer Society.


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