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<article language="en">
	<journal>
		<journal_title>Social Geography</journal_title>
		<journal_url>www.soc-geogr.net</journal_url>
		<issn>1729-4274</issn>
		<eissn>1729-4312</eissn>
		<volume_number>2</volume_number>
		<issue_number>2</issue_number>
		<publication_year>2007</publication_year>
	</journal>
	<doi>10.5194/sg-2-115-2007</doi>
	<article_url>http://www.soc-geogr.net/2/115/2007/</article_url>
	<abstract_html>http://www.soc-geogr.net/2/115/2007/sg-2-115-2007.html</abstract_html>
	<fulltext_pdf>http://www.soc-geogr.net/2/115/2007/sg-2-115-2007.pdf</fulltext_pdf>
	<start_page>115</start_page>
	<end_page>123</end_page>
	<publication_date>2007-12-20</publication_date>
	<article_title content_type="html">Mobile talent or privileged sites? Making sense of biotech knowledge worker mobility and performance in Sweden</article_title>
	<authors>
		<author numeration="1" affiliations="1">
			<name>H. Mattsson</name>
			<email>henrik.mattsson@kultgeog.uu.se</email>
		</author>
	</authors>
	<affiliations>
		<affiliation numeration="1" content_type="html">Dept. of Social &amp; Economic Geography and CIND, Uppsala Universitet, Sweden</affiliation>
	</affiliations>
	<abstract content_type="html">Great hope is currently put in biotechnological innovation to create
economic growth and ensure future competitiveness of regions and nations.
For some years, economic geography and economics have been focusing on
privileged sites when explaining geographical variances in actors&apos; ability
to innovate: e.g. regional innovation systems, clusters, industrial
districts and creative milieus. In such explanations, the basic notion is
that certain sites, as a result of their privileged configuration, relative
position and history, tend to support innovation to a higher degree than
other milieus. Lately, however, there has been a shift in focus within some
research communities towards what could be called a &quot;talented people&quot;
explanation. The problem for those interested in biotech innovation policy
and in the larger question about exactly how biotechnological knowledge
production takes place, is that this debate offers two diametrically
different understandings of (i) the geography of innovation and, in turn,
(ii) how to actually design innovative spaces or increase rates of
innovation. According to the talented people argument, innovation policy
should be focusing on designing attractive spaces in which creative people
want to live, while the privileged sites argument instead focuses on
figuring out how to design creative spaces. In this paper, a unique dataset
is used to explore to what extent the two debating concepts, privileged
sites and talented people, can explain what is going on in biotech
landscapes in Sweden.</abstract>
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</article>

