Manufacturing Social Capital: Social Networks through Civic Innovation Initiatives

The gentrification of industrial land in post-industrial cities is a driving force to displace urban manufacturing firms from cities. Entering the 2010s, manufacturing clusters started to be rebranded as innovation districts that connect manufacturers to entrepreneurs, designers, and artists to deve...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ahn, Chaewon
Other Authors: Williams, Sarah
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139232
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1986-2607
_version_ 1811092514906570752
author Ahn, Chaewon
author2 Williams, Sarah
author_facet Williams, Sarah
Ahn, Chaewon
author_sort Ahn, Chaewon
collection MIT
description The gentrification of industrial land in post-industrial cities is a driving force to displace urban manufacturing firms from cities. Entering the 2010s, manufacturing clusters started to be rebranded as innovation districts that connect manufacturers to entrepreneurs, designers, and artists to develop innovative products with a renewed attention on the rapid and flexible prototyping techniques in the area. This research takes the Sewoon area in the center of Seoul, South Korea as a case to evaluate the efficacy of the network-building innovation programs. The dissertation questions whether and how artificially created new networks can enhance the firms’ innovative capacity and also strengthen the power and agency of manufacturing communities in the planning process to challenge state-sanctioned industrial gentrification. Combining social network analysis, interviews, and ethnographic fieldwork on the “Remake Sewoon” project, I investigate, 1) how the innovation projects, planned and implemented by governance working groups create collaborative relationships with firms structurally and culturally embedded in the local economy; 2) whether firms with strong innovative potential that occupy “structural holes” in these innovation networks also “bridge” heterogeneous industries to promote inclusiveness; and 3) how the governance working groups utilize these bridging and linking networks between the community and the city government in the negotiation of a controversial zoning rule that threatens the manufacturing community. I argue that the network-building innovation programs create concentrated opportunities for new industries that lead to serious pitfalls as this weakens the overall power against industrial gentrification. In a context in which strong firm embeddedness of traditional firms act as barriers against their inclusion in innovative networks, innovative opportunities and access to vertical power are focused on the new industries. This compounds the vulnerabilities of traditional industries and jeopardizes the sustainability of the innovation programs in the long run. As a result, I find that the innovation networks embedded in top-down planning reinforce city ideologies and power, despite the governance working groups’ effort to mitigate the community and institutional power. The dissertation argues that the sustainability of innovation networking programs depends on the more active involvement of pre-existing social capital of traditional industries.
first_indexed 2024-09-23T15:19:25Z
format Thesis
id mit-1721.1/139232
institution Massachusetts Institute of Technology
last_indexed 2024-09-23T15:19:25Z
publishDate 2022
publisher Massachusetts Institute of Technology
record_format dspace
spelling mit-1721.1/1392322022-01-15T03:10:07Z Manufacturing Social Capital: Social Networks through Civic Innovation Initiatives Ahn, Chaewon Williams, Sarah Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Urban Studies and Planning The gentrification of industrial land in post-industrial cities is a driving force to displace urban manufacturing firms from cities. Entering the 2010s, manufacturing clusters started to be rebranded as innovation districts that connect manufacturers to entrepreneurs, designers, and artists to develop innovative products with a renewed attention on the rapid and flexible prototyping techniques in the area. This research takes the Sewoon area in the center of Seoul, South Korea as a case to evaluate the efficacy of the network-building innovation programs. The dissertation questions whether and how artificially created new networks can enhance the firms’ innovative capacity and also strengthen the power and agency of manufacturing communities in the planning process to challenge state-sanctioned industrial gentrification. Combining social network analysis, interviews, and ethnographic fieldwork on the “Remake Sewoon” project, I investigate, 1) how the innovation projects, planned and implemented by governance working groups create collaborative relationships with firms structurally and culturally embedded in the local economy; 2) whether firms with strong innovative potential that occupy “structural holes” in these innovation networks also “bridge” heterogeneous industries to promote inclusiveness; and 3) how the governance working groups utilize these bridging and linking networks between the community and the city government in the negotiation of a controversial zoning rule that threatens the manufacturing community. I argue that the network-building innovation programs create concentrated opportunities for new industries that lead to serious pitfalls as this weakens the overall power against industrial gentrification. In a context in which strong firm embeddedness of traditional firms act as barriers against their inclusion in innovative networks, innovative opportunities and access to vertical power are focused on the new industries. This compounds the vulnerabilities of traditional industries and jeopardizes the sustainability of the innovation programs in the long run. As a result, I find that the innovation networks embedded in top-down planning reinforce city ideologies and power, despite the governance working groups’ effort to mitigate the community and institutional power. The dissertation argues that the sustainability of innovation networking programs depends on the more active involvement of pre-existing social capital of traditional industries. Ph.D. 2022-01-14T14:58:15Z 2022-01-14T14:58:15Z 2021-06 2021-07-27T20:25:18.244Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139232 https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1986-2607 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright retained by author(s) https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Ahn, Chaewon
Manufacturing Social Capital: Social Networks through Civic Innovation Initiatives
title Manufacturing Social Capital: Social Networks through Civic Innovation Initiatives
title_full Manufacturing Social Capital: Social Networks through Civic Innovation Initiatives
title_fullStr Manufacturing Social Capital: Social Networks through Civic Innovation Initiatives
title_full_unstemmed Manufacturing Social Capital: Social Networks through Civic Innovation Initiatives
title_short Manufacturing Social Capital: Social Networks through Civic Innovation Initiatives
title_sort manufacturing social capital social networks through civic innovation initiatives
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139232
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1986-2607
work_keys_str_mv AT ahnchaewon manufacturingsocialcapitalsocialnetworksthroughcivicinnovationinitiatives