Part I Innovation, Technology
and Policy.- 1 Introduction(Nathaniel O.
Agola).- 2 Inclusive
Innovation: Beyond the Laboratory (David
J. Grimshaw).- 3 Enabling an
Inclusive Innovation Ecosystem and SME Development in Kenya: The Role of ICTs (Elijah
Bitange Ndemo).- 4 Drivers of Inclusive
Innovation in Developing County Markets: A Policy Perspective (Christopher
Foster and Richard Heeks).- 5 Can Community Energy
Projects be a Game-Changer Driving the Transition towards a Sustainable Energy
System in Japan? (Salaam
Al Khateeb).- Part II Business and Inclusive Innovation.- 6 5Ps of Innovation Space and Leveraging
Latent Value: How to Effectively Innovate and Serve at the Table of Inclusive
Innovation (Nathaniel
O. Agola).- 7 GSK in Africa: An Inclusive Strategy Case Study for Low Income Market
Segments (Tashmia Ismail and Philip Powell).- 8 Inclusive Innovation or Inclusive Adaptation?
Training Skills for Social Entrepreneurship in the Philippines (Keith Jackson
and Heriberto Ruiz-Tafoya).- Part III Human Security, Morality and Sustainable Development.- 9 Innovation or impediment?
On morality and development (Willem Fourie).- 10 Innovation
and the security of vulnerable people: shared security and the challenges of
exclusion (Mike Hardy).- 11 Artificial Intelligence
and Human Security (Alan Hunter).- 12 Conclusion (Alan Hunter).
Nathaniel Agola is Professor of
International Economics and Finance at the Graduate School of Global Studies at
Doshisha University, Kyoto, Japan. He has authored, and co-edited three books,
a number of book chapters, and dozens of research papers in peer-reviewed
journals. Other than teaching and research, he is also actively involved in
consulting in business and economic development in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Alan
Hunter is Professor of Asian Studies at Coventry University, UK, where he was
formerly Director of the Centre for Peace and Reconciliation Studies. Alan has
worked and studied in China, India, Japan and Singapore and is currently Visiting
Professor at the Graduate School of Global Studies at Doshisha University,
Kyoto, Japan.
Employing a three-dimensional
approach, this book discusses inclusive innovation for socio-economic growth
and development, and the implications for human security within the context of
developing and emerging economies. Focusing on a new and innovative area of
research, Inclusive Innovation for
Sustainable Development explores new social and technological processes
that are created within, and for the benefit of, marginalised populations.
Considering policy and issues surrounding technology, business strategies and
best practices, theoretical underpinnings and a broader contextualisation, the
authors interrogate the concept of the inclusivity of innovations. Written from
the perspective of the new UN paradigm which states that “no one will be left
behind”, the book considers the potential contribution of modern technology to
human security and develops frameworks that counter the potential increases in inequality
that this may bring. With contributions from leading international scholars in
a range of disciplines, as well as practitioners in international development
organizations and private sector actors Inclusive
Innovation for Sustainable Development provides a way forward for excluded
majority populations to take control of innovative technologies and business
processes.