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The New Political Economy of Innovation: Why Australian Policymakers Need Better Tools
As AI reshapes labour markets, Australian policymakers find themselves reactive rather than strategic. Geographic isolation intensifies the risk. Political economy thinking offers better tools for governing technological transitions strategically, but these remain outside mainstream policy practice. Bringing them back requires political action: building institutions, allocating resources, and challenging existing distributions of influence.

Dr John H Howard
Oct 1411 min read
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From Public Good to Corporate Enterprise: The Financialisation of Universities - Causes, Consequences, and What Must Be Done
Australian universities have transformed from public institutions into corporate enterprises through commercial accounting standards. With $40 billion in combined revenue and $110 billion in assets, they now prioritise financial metrics over academic mission. This shift compromises traditional roles of knowledge creation, critical inquiry and community engagement, forcing institutions to treat education as a business rather than a public good.

Dr John H Howard
Sep 99 min read
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Policy Imperatives for National Innovation Ecosystem Development
New research examining 80+ international innovation districts reveals what drives success. From MIT's Kendall Square to Singapore's One North, thriving ecosystems integrate placemaking, economics, business development and governance. Success comes from institutional capabilities and relationships, not impressive buildings. Australian policymakers can learn from global best practices whilst avoiding common pitfalls like property-led development models

Dr John H Howard
Sep 26 min read
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Thinking in Public: Australia’s Missing Innovation Policy—Will It Ever Be Found? A new book from the Acton Institute for Innovation
At a time when the language of innovation is everywhere yet the architecture for delivering it is so often absent, the need for honest, grounded, and practical thinking is urgent. The goal of this book is not to predict the future, but to inform and provoke those with the responsibility and agency to shape it.

Dr John H Howard
Jun 302 min read
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The Restless Portfolio: How Australia's Bureaucratic Reshuffling Reveals a Crisis of Industrial Vision
Since 1963, Australia’s federal industry portfolio has been restructured more than 20 times. This extraordinary level of administrative churn exposes a deeper crisis: a persistent uncertainty about the purpose, priorities, and pathways of industrial policy.
This Innovation Insight calls for a reevaluation of institutional maturity—one that strikes a balance between executive flexibility and enduring strategic direction.

Dr John H Howard
Jun 39 min read
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Innovation Policy Design: a Battle of Conceptual Vagueness
I've been analysing Australia's innovation policy and discovered something striking: the Administrative Arrangements Order (which allocates government responsibilities) doesn't mention "innovation" anywhere.
Departments are assigned responsibility for research, science, and technology, but no department is given responsibility for innovation itself.
This helps explain why we keep cycling through reviews, Ministerial statements, and "renewed" strategies without delivering tran

Dr John H Howard
May 279 min read
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From Public Administration to Politics: Drivers and Consequences for Public Policy
The transformation of public administration from a domain grounded in public management to one dominated by political analysis represents a fundamental epistemological and institutional shift in the theory and practice of governance.
The path forward is to reconcile its tensions, revisiting the lost arts of administration while embracing the political realities of contemporary governance. Doing so will allow public policy to once again be both effective and legitimate.

Dr John H Howard
May 209 min read
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