Leïla Kebir
École Normale Supérieure
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Publication
Featured researches published by Leïla Kebir.
Communication à ESF exploratory workshop: “The governance of Networks as a Determinant of Local Economic Development” | 2006
José Corpataux; Olivier Crevoisier; Leïla Kebir; Bernard Pecqueur; Véronique Peyrache-Gadeau
Today many contributions are dedicated to the role of industrial districts, clusters and other such networks in local economic development, or to local innovation dynamics (innovative milieus, technopoles, regional innovation systems, learning regions and so on). In our opinion, the crucial question at present no longer consists of providing new notions and concepts. We believe that it is time to develop a more ambitious, theoryoriented research programme that aims to take space and time in socioeconomic theory fully into account. The objective of this chapter is to give a first account of what we believe to be the upcoming issues and theoretical questions in research about territorial economic dynamics. Indeed, a better understanding of the territorial economy is central to greater understanding of the roles that networks play in local economic development processes.
Regional Studies | 2016
Hugues Jeannerat; Leïla Kebir
Jeannerat H. and Kebir L. Knowledge, resources and markets: what economic system of valuation?, Regional Studies. Exploring in ever more detail learning processes at the root of economic change, main territorial innovation models (TIMs) remain focused on production today. Thus consumption is most often assessed as an abstract demand expressed by exogenous market mechanisms. In a socio-institutional approach, this article conceptualizes an economic system in which knowledge is a constructed resource valued in a market through the co-evolution of a production and a consumption system. From a meta-synthesis of various case studies, the paper draws four ideal types of economic systems and their related territorial knowledge dynamics (TKDs): knowledge marketization, knowledge improvement, knowledge adaptation and knowledge co-development.
International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation Management | 2007
Leïla Kebir; Olivier Crevoisier
The innovative milieu approach consists of exploring how and to which extent local environments contribute to the coherence and the competitiveness of production systems. In line with this work, the present paper explores the articulation of high value added services creation, regional development, and natural and cultural resources evolution. Based on conceptual and empirical research, the central issue of the paper is the link between the resources (understood here as relation processes between objects and production systems), the production systems and the markets in terms of co-ordination in time and space. In this research, innovation dynamics and the innovative milieu appear as key elements in the creation and the maintaining of material resources (landscape, soil, etc.) as well as non-material resources (know-how, knowledge, cultural resources, etc.). The paper argues that innovative milieus play an important role in the identification and the implementation of new resources based on existing objects.
Archive | 2017
Leïla Kebir; Véronique Peyrache-Gadeau; Olivier Crevoisier
Following the crisis of Fordism, which was characterized by standardized production and mass consumption, innovation was brought back to its central position amongst models of economic and social change. Since the end of the 1980s, territorial innovation models (TIMs) (Moulaert and Sekia, 2003) have been the primary reference in public policies relating to innovation and regional and urban development. This book raises the question of the validity of those models, and particularly the innovative milieus approach, at a time when sustainable development has become the dominant norm in matters of territorial development and innovation. Can these models, constructed in a period when competitiveness was considered as a constraint and a solution to numerous economic and social problems, still account for the processes under way today and, more particularly, for sustainable innovation? Furthermore, factors associated with sustainable development complicate the issue by introducing broader objectives than those of green industry and competitiveness (Truffer and Cohen, 2012). The climaterelated, ecological, social and economic difficulties facing today’s societies demand innovations (Vollenbroek, 2002) that are able to support the transition towards a sustainable economy and society (Coenen et al., 2012). In parallel with this shift in social norms, the last 20 years have seen considerable growth in the mobility of capital, knowledge, workers and consumers. Moreover, the development of the Internet and mobile systems has culminated in ubiquitous connectivity, with the result that products, services and economic activities can be continually evaluated by a large community of users, citizens, organizations or experts. From a spatial configuration dominated by competition between regional systems of production and innovation on a global market, there has been
Food Policy | 2013
Christine Aubry; Leïla Kebir
Archive | 2004
Leïla Kebir; Olivier Crevoisier
Chapters | 2008
José Corpataux; Olivier Crevoisier; Bernard Pecqueur; Véronique Peyrache-Gadeau; Leïla Kebir
Archive | 2012
Hugues Jeannerat; Leïla Kebir
Archive | 2008
Christine Aubry; Leïla Kebir; Catherine Pasquier
Archive | 2017
Leïla Kebir; Olivier Crevoisier; Pedro Costa; Véronique Peyrache-Gadeau