Axler Renata E, Miller Fiona A, Lehoux Pascale, Lemmens Trudo
World Health Innovation Network, Odette School of Business, University of Windsor, 401 Sunset Avenue, Windsor, ON N9B 3P4, Canada.
Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, 155 College Street, Suite 425, Toronto, ON M5T 3M6, Canada.
Sci Public Policy. 2018 Jun;45(3):404-415. doi: 10.1093/scipol/scx075. Epub 2017 Nov 6.
Given growing initiatives incentivizing academic researchers to engage in 'entrepreneurial' activities, this article examines how these academic entrepreneurs claim value in their entrepreneurial engagements, and navigate concerns related to conflicts of interest. Using data from qualitative interviews with twenty-four academic entrepreneurs in Canada, we show how these scientists value entrepreneurial activities for providing financial and intellectual resources to academic science, as well as for their potential to create impact through translation. Simultaneously, these scientists claimed to maintain academic norms of disinterested science and avoid conflicts of interest. Using theories of institutional work, we demonstrate how entrepreneurial scientists engage in processes of institutional change-through-maintenance, drawing on the maintenance of academic norms as institutional resources to legitimize entrepreneurial activities. As entrepreneurial scientists work to legitimize new zones of academic scientific practice, there is a need to carefully regulate and scrutinize these activities so that their potential harms do not become obscured.
鉴于越来越多的举措鼓励学术研究人员参与“创业”活动,本文探讨了这些学术创业者如何在其创业活动中获取价值,以及如何应对与利益冲突相关的问题。通过对加拿大24位学术创业者进行定性访谈所获得的数据,我们展示了这些科学家如何重视创业活动,因为它为学术科学提供了资金和智力资源,以及通过转化创造影响的潜力。同时,这些科学家声称要保持学术科学的无私规范并避免利益冲突。运用制度工作理论,我们展示了创业科学家如何通过维护学术规范作为制度资源来使创业活动合法化,从而参与制度变革-维护过程。随着创业科学家努力使学术科学实践的新领域合法化,有必要仔细规范和审查这些活动,以免其潜在危害被忽视。