Professor Bjørn T. Asheim has since 2001 the chair in economic geography
at the Department of Social and Economic Geography, University of Lund,
Sweden, and is co-founder and deputy director of the new Centre of
Excellence in innovation system research at Lund University called
CIRCLE (Centre for Innovation, Research and Competence in the Learning
Economy) from 2004. He is also part time professor at the Centre for
Technology, Innovation and Culture, University of Oslo, Norway, since
2001. He was previously full professor in human geography at the
Department of Sociology and Human Geography, University of Oslo
(1993-99) and at the Centre for Technology, Innovation and Culture,
University of Oslo (1999-2001). He has also for many years been
associated with the Research Council funded STEP-group (Studies in
technology, innovation and economic policy) in Oslo as a part time
senior researcher and scientific advisor (1994-2001). He has been head
of the Department of Human Geography (1989-1994), and has had positions
in national and international professional committees within economic
and human geography, e.g. as the vice-chair in the International
Geographical Union Study Group on Local Development. He was a member of
the steering committee of the research programme Enterprise Development
2000 in the Norwegian Research Council, and is now member of the
steering committee for the new programme on Value Creation 2010. He is
member of several program committees at VINNOVA (Swedish Agency for
Innovation Systems), one of them being the program committee on learning
and sustainable working life. He has also been member of the executive
committee of the Oslo Summer School in Comparative Social Science
Studies at the Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Oslo
(1993-2001). He is a member of the International Advisory Board of the
Centre for European Studies on Territorial Development, University of
Durham, UK, and of the international advisory committee for the Canadian
Innovation Systems Research Network and MCRI Clusters project. He is
Editor of Economic Geography and Regional Studies, and member of the
editorial board of several European scientific journals including
European Planning Studies and Journal of Economic Geography. He has
served as an international expert for UNCTAD, OECD (mission to Scottish
Enterprise in 2002) and EU/DG XVI and Research (rapporteur in Expert
Group on Creating Regional Advantage 2004-2005).
Professor Asheim is trained as both a business economist (MSc, The
Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration, Bergen) and a
human geographer (PhD, University of Lund, Sweden). He is well-known
internationally for his research in the areas of economic and industrial
geography, where his main research specialisations include: Comparative
analyses of industrial districts and regional clusters; SMEs and
innovation policy; technological change, globalisation and endogenous
regional development; regional innovation systems and learning regions.
He was coordinator of a EU/TSER project on SME Policy and the Regional
Dimension of Innovation (2000), and ongoing research includes a
European Science Foundation (ESF)/Swedish Research Council project on
Technology, talent and tolerance, which he also coordinates, with
participation from Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, UK, Germany and the
Netherlands; and CIRCLE projects on comparing regional innovation
systems in Canada and the Nordic countries. He is also participating in
two biotech projects; one in the Øresund region and one comparative
European funded by European Science Foundation/Swedish Research Council,
with participation from Sweden, Finland, UK, the Netherlands and
Switzerland, and he was in charge of a newly completed Nordic
comparative project on SMEs and regional innovation systems. He has also
been involved in projects for the Norwegian Research Council on
globalisation, where he initiated and was the director of a large
interdisciplinary research programme at the Centre for technology,
innovation and culture, University of Oslo; and is currently working in
projects on regional innovation systems and national business systems;
and on learning regions in a joint project between VINNOVA and Norwegian
Research Council. He has many international publications within these
subjects, of which the following refereed publications in the period
from 1996 could be mentioned:
Last modified 4 Dec 2009