Assessing the triple helix model for research and development in sub-Saharan Africa
(1) University of Benin Nigerian Academy of Science
(2) Nigerian Academy of Science
(3) Chicago State University, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Corresponding Author
Abstract
The triple helix model refers to when universities, industry, and government work together to foster economic and social development (Leydesdorff, 2012; Galvao et al., 2019). The concept was first theorised in the 1990s by Henry Etzkowitz and Loet Leidesdorff to underscore the relationship between universities, governments, and industry using universities' research innovations to propel economic development (Etzkowitz and Leydesdorff, 2000). Expanding on the triple helix model, Elias Carayannis, and David Campbell in 2009 added a fourth dimension by highlighting the role of the media and civil society within the framework (Carayannis and Campbell, 2009). Increasingly, the accurate dissemination of scientific innovations derived from university-industry-government collaboration has given the model a pre-eminent place in institutional empyrean (Etzkowitz, 2003).
Keywords
Sub-saharan Africa, triple helix model, research and development
References
African Academy of Science (2019). Industry and higher education – the triple helix association. https://triplehelixassociation.org.
Balogun JA (2020). Chapter 6: Pioneer Nigerian healthcare academicians. Chapter 10: Elite Nigerian healthcare academics in diaspora. In: Healthcare education in Nigeria: Evolutions and emerging paradigms. Routledge Publication. https://www.routledge.com/9780367482091 (Accessed: 1 February 2021)
Carayannis EG
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DOI: 10.57046/VQBZ7705
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