A place-based policy for promoting Industry 4.0: the case of the Castellon ceramic tile district

Digitization and its impact on regions and clusters remains overlooked in the literature, and constitute this present paper's goal. How does an industrial district transit collectively to the adoption of new radical changes brought about by Industry 4.0? This study explores the role of collecti...

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Veröffentlicht in:European planning studies 2019-09, Vol.27 (9), p.1838-1856
Hauptverfasser: Hervas-Oliver, Jose-Luis, Estelles-Miguel, Sofia, Mallol-Gasch, Gustavo, Boix-Palomero, Juan
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container_end_page 1856
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1838
container_title European planning studies
container_volume 27
creator Hervas-Oliver, Jose-Luis
Estelles-Miguel, Sofia
Mallol-Gasch, Gustavo
Boix-Palomero, Juan
description Digitization and its impact on regions and clusters remains overlooked in the literature, and constitute this present paper's goal. How does an industrial district transit collectively to the adoption of new radical changes brought about by Industry 4.0? This study explores the role of collective actors and innovation platforms during the early stages of a pilot policy to stimulate a collective transition of an entire MID (Marshallian Industrial District) into Industry 4.0. We posit that institutional isomorphism and the existent social capital in MIDs is a double-sword phenomenon that can also positively constitute an enabler for fostering change on a collective-basis. Technology transitions, such as Industry 4.0, can be supported and led by collective actors that are central in facilitating the adoption of Industry 4.0 in MIDs, enticing innovative firms to engage in that transition, establishing, legitimizing, and embedding a new set of processes, practices and inter-firm arrangements for digitizing and then promoting imitation: the positive leverage of isomorphism. Thus, MID transition is facilitated through capitalizing on the MID logic of cooperation-competition and isomorphism, by developing and promoting a collective understanding of the new paradigm, building a supportive infrastructure, educating in the new technology and avoiding cognitive inertia.
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source PAIS Index; Business Source Complete
subjects Adoption of innovations
Ceramics industry
clusters
Cognitive ability
Competition
Cooperation
Digitization
Digitizing
Embedding
Imitation
Industrial areas
Industrial policy
Industry 4.0
Infrastructure
innovation
Innovations
Isomorphism
Leverage
Marshallian Industrial Districts
New technology
Radicalism
Social capital
Transportation
title A place-based policy for promoting Industry 4.0: the case of the Castellon ceramic tile district
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