TY - JOUR
T1 - Fab labs in Italy: Collective goods in the Sharing Economy
AU - Manzo, Cecilia
AU - Ramella, Francesco
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - Fab Labs are small workshops, open to the public, that offer tools and services for digital manufacturing, thus promoting social and economic innovation. For these reasons they can be considered «local collective goods»: they are created as part of the sharing economy and they are able to generate external economies, tangible and intangible, useful for development. These collective assets, however, have operating modes and «generative mechanisms» that differ in part from the traditional ones that literature on local development has been exploring so far. The objective of the article, therefore, is to explore Fab Labs from this perspective, with particular reference to the Italian situation. Italy is, indeed, a particularly interesting case, because while official indicators describe the economy as not very innovative, there has, in the case of Fab Labs, been a surprising degree of development. To solve this «puzzle», the authors propose an interpretive key that refers to both the «human capital surplus» and the «deficit of collective goods» existing in this country, which has a strong manufacturing vocation based on small and medium sized enterprises.
AB - Fab Labs are small workshops, open to the public, that offer tools and services for digital manufacturing, thus promoting social and economic innovation. For these reasons they can be considered «local collective goods»: they are created as part of the sharing economy and they are able to generate external economies, tangible and intangible, useful for development. These collective assets, however, have operating modes and «generative mechanisms» that differ in part from the traditional ones that literature on local development has been exploring so far. The objective of the article, therefore, is to explore Fab Labs from this perspective, with particular reference to the Italian situation. Italy is, indeed, a particularly interesting case, because while official indicators describe the economy as not very innovative, there has, in the case of Fab Labs, been a surprising degree of development. To solve this «puzzle», the authors propose an interpretive key that refers to both the «human capital surplus» and the «deficit of collective goods» existing in this country, which has a strong manufacturing vocation based on small and medium sized enterprises.
KW - Economic Sociology
KW - Innovation and Invention
KW - Jel Classification: Z13
KW - Social Innovation
KW - Economic Sociology
KW - Innovation and Invention
KW - Jel Classification: Z13
KW - Social Innovation
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/139806
UR - https://www.rivisteweb.it/download/article/10.1425/81605
U2 - 10.1425/81605
DO - 10.1425/81605
M3 - Article
SN - 0392-9701
SP - 379
EP - 418
JO - Stato e Mercato
JF - Stato e Mercato
ER -