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Biotechnology and governance in Australia and Sweden: path dependency or instutional convergence?

Version 2 2024-06-13, 07:39
Version 1 2014-10-27, 16:29
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 07:39 authored by H Lofgren, M Benner
The development of new generic technologies occurs within traditional structures of industry-government interaction, but also unleashes a process of 'creative destruction' generating new institutional patterns. This article, focusing on biotechnology, describes and compares policy processes and institutional arrangements in Australia and Sweden. The Swedish biotechnology sector displays a pattern of fragmentation and relatively weak state steering. Australia, by contrast, has implemented a set of comparatively coordinated regulatory and other measures to foster the growth of biotechnology. This observation contradicts the characterisation of Sweden as a 'strong state' economy, and challenges the depiction of Australia as lacking in state steering capacity. The relative open-endedness of the search in these countries for a mode of regulation of biotechnology suggests that the role of the state in economic restructuring today is fundamentally distinct from that of earlier periods.

History

Journal

Australian journal of political science

Volume

38

Pagination

25-43

Location

London, England

ISSN

1036-1146

eISSN

1363-030X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2003, Taylor & Francis

Issue

1

Publisher

Routledge