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How Innovation Districts Emerge: Pathways, Preconditions, and Policy Implications
People regularly ask whether innovation districts can be deliberately created or whether they emerge beyond policy control. This Insight argues that districts arise through a small number of recurring pathways rather than a single replicable model. Drawing on international experience, it shows why policy outcomes depend less on ambition than on correctly diagnosing which pathway is plausible in a given context. Replicating the Silicon Valley or China approaches is fraught.

Dr John H Howard
3 days ago9 min read


Beyond Collisions: Towards A Theory of Serendipitous Interaction in Innovation Districts, Precincts and Hubs
Innovation precinct strategies routinely promise "chance encounters" and "spontaneous collaboration" as if bringing talented people together in well-designed spaces automatically produces productive connections. The evidence is weak.
Many precincts deliver proximity without interaction. Tenants occupy adjacent floors for years without substantive engagement. Shared amenities become places where people check phones rather than start conversations.
My latest Innovation Insight

Dr John H Howard
Jan 1323 min read


Pillars in Parallel: How to Create Genuine Collaboration to Achieve Innovation Ecosystem Outcomes
Modern innovation ecosystems often fail, not from a lack of talent, but from a failure of collaboration. The key institutional pillars—university, industry, and government—operate in parallel rather than converging. They are driven by fundamentally different missions: eminence, profit, and probity. Genuine collaboration requires a clear-eyed understanding and respect for these core institutional drivers. We must build the bridge from simple transactions to deep, integrated p

Dr John H Howard
Dec 2, 20259 min read


Beyond Buzzwords: An Integrated Framework for Understanding Place-Based Innovation Ecosystems
This article reviews The Handbook of Innovation Ecosystems , detailing its "four-domain convergence framework" . It argues that successful ecosystems are not accidental but require the deliberate, long-term integration of Placemaking, Economics, Business, and Governance . It provides a practical guide for policymakers and practitioners to move beyond rhetoric and build durable, inclusive innovation capacity .

Dr John H Howard
Oct 30, 20257 min read
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