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Business meets the humanities: the human perspective in University-Industry collaboration

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Routledge New York 2023Description: ix, 187 pISBN:
  • 9781032050102
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 338.968 MAH
Summary: Within the last decades, universities are increasingly expected and measured by their direct engagement in collaborations beyond academia. Exploring the potential that lies in university-business collaborations, the present anthology attends to the dilemmas, dualities, and challenges that follow such collaborations, especially in the academic traditions of the social sciences and humanities. Each contribution investigates how the human perspective - a perspective that highlights how complex knowledge and a deep understanding of human everyday life - enriches companies' processes, products, services, and ideas. Some chapters focus on collaborations between researchers and business practitioners, others focus on teaching examples involving students in the collaborative work with businesses and organisations, and again others contribute with more theoretical considerations. By gathering hands-on experiences, the book provides readers with inspirations, reflections on, and insights into university-business collaborations. This book, therefore, is intended for researchers within the humanities and social sciences, who want to get a deeper understanding of the practice of such collaborations.
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Table of Contents Chapter 1. Introduction Martina Skrubbeltrang Mahnke, Mikka Nielsen, Matilde Lykkebo Petersen, Lise Tjørring Chapter 2. Provoking dialogue: Ethnographic examples as bridge-builders in university-industry collaborations Lise Tjørring, Mikka Nielsen Chapter 3. Becoming-with or not at all: the case of a university-business collaboration contract Matilde Lykkebo Petersen Chapter 4. Performing impact through texts: Unwrapping the social processes behind an tnstitutional term Ivanche Dimitrievski, Håkan Jönsson Chapter 5. Questioning the business-humanities divide in media studies: a reformulation of the administrative-critical distinction in stakeholder collaboration Niklas Alexander Chimirri, Jelena Kleut, David Mathieu, Pille Pruulmann-Vengerfeldt Chapter 6. Making Difference: An enquiry into what happens when an architect company acquires humanistic knowledge as a competitive business strategy Mark Vacher Chapter 7. Human-centred research and Open Innovation (OI): How to implement and facilitate crosscutting collaborations in the built environment Isabel Froes, Cameline Bolbroe Chapter 8. From position- to issue-driven collaborations between the humanities and business: The case of 'Eat it, and save it' Morten Krogh Petersen Chapter 9. Designing anthropological impact: How case-based teaching makes a difference Simon Westergaard Lex, Kasper Tang Vangkilde Chapter 10. The AIM method: Bringing teaching, research, and business together in authentic industry mega-cases Mie Femø Nielsen Chapter 11. Differing expectations in student-industry collaborations: Towards a value-based framework fostering dialogic ground Martina Skrubbeltrang Mahnke, Karsten Pedersen

Within the last decades, universities are increasingly expected and measured by their direct engagement in collaborations beyond academia. Exploring the potential that lies in university-business collaborations, the present anthology attends to the dilemmas, dualities, and challenges that follow such collaborations, especially in the academic traditions of the social sciences and humanities. Each contribution investigates how the human perspective - a perspective that highlights how complex knowledge and a deep understanding of human everyday life - enriches companies' processes, products, services, and ideas. Some chapters focus on collaborations between researchers and business practitioners, others focus on teaching examples involving students in the collaborative work with businesses and organisations, and again others contribute with more theoretical considerations. By gathering hands-on experiences, the book provides readers with inspirations, reflections on, and insights into university-business collaborations. This book, therefore, is intended for researchers within the humanities and social sciences, who want to get a deeper understanding of the practice of such collaborations.

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