The EU and innovation [What Think Tanks are thinking]
The European Union has long sought ways to foster innovation, starting with support for research and industrial policies in the 1970s, through action plans in the 1990s and the Lisbon Strategy of 2000, to the Europe 2020 strategy of 2010, now updated by the 10 priorities of European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker. According to a recent study, innovation policy has evolved to be understood as an umbrella notion, which encompasses research, industrial and education policies, as well as policies key for the innovation process, such as funding, taxation, regulation, standards and intellectual property rights. Efforts to boost innovation are also part of many EU programmes, such as the Digital Single Market. This note offers links to recent studies and reports from major international think tanks and research institutes on problems faced by Europe in supporting innovation.
At a Glance
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Publication type
Author
Policy area
Keyword
- communications
- diffusion of innovations
- digital single market
- EDUCATION AND COMMUNICATIONS
- ENERGY
- energy policy
- energy policy
- ENVIRONMENT
- environmental policy
- environmental policy
- EU industrial policy
- European construction
- European neighbourhood policy
- EUROPEAN UNION
- industrial structures and policy
- INDUSTRY
- information technology
- innovation
- international affairs
- INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
- PRODUCTION, TECHNOLOGY AND RESEARCH
- research and development
- research and intellectual property
- technology and technical regulations
- think tank
- transatlantic relations
- TRANSPORT
- transport policy
- transport policy