Territorial  development: between innovation and technological change
  
Rutilo  Tomás Rea Becerra
  Universidad de  Guadalajara, México
  rutilo3@hotmail.com
  
  Cándido  González Pérez
  Universidad de  Guadalajara, México
candido195913@yahoo.com.mx
Resumen 
  
La  mayoría de los estudios regionales coinciden en que los análisis sobre el  territorio refieren por esencia a un espacio geográfico determinado, el cual  conlleva en sí mismo determinados elementos naturales como sus plantas,  animales, montes, valles, ríos o lagunas; es decir, todo territorio o región  ostenta una serie de recursos  que lo  caracterizan y le dan vida. Sin embargo, si   la región la redujéramos al aspecto geográfico, posiblemente centraríamos  su análisis en el relieve o altura de sus montañas, en sus montes, valles, a la  composición de sus recursos energéticos,   o a la variedad de su flora y fauna, es decir,  se destacarían esencialmente sus aspectos  naturales,  y se dejaría de lado la  presencia humana, lo cual implicaría una visión pasiva del análisis regional.  Sin embargo, a pesar de que puedan existir lugares en los que no exista la  presencia de  individuos, su análisis o  estudio requiere necesariamente de la figura por lo menos de quien  investiga.  Existe entonces una diferencia  entre lo que se considera “la región” y lo que se aborda como  “regionalización”.  La primera categoría  implicaría la existencia real y objetiva de un espacio determinado, la segunda,  la forma en la que se emprende por el investigador o como se apropian sus habitantes  de ese espacio y como se gestan sus  interrelaciones, que por lo demás está decir, resulta una tarea ardua hacerlo  en toda su dimensión o magnitud. Es decir, resulta muy complejo estudiar una  región en la que se abarque todos sus aspectos: físicos, biológicos, naturales,  políticos, sociales y culturales al mismo tiempo. Ya que a pesar de que su abordaje  es por excelencia un estudio multidisciplinario, en todos los análisis que se realizan,  se potencia el punto de vista de una de las disciplinas del saber.
Palabras Clave: Región, producción, cultura, trabajo.
  Abstract
  Most  regional studies agree that territorial analysis essentially refers to a  specific geographical area, which carries with it certain natural elements such  as plants, animals, mountains, valleys, rivers, or lakes; that is, that all  territory or region boasts a number of resources that characterize it and give  it life. However, if we reduce the region only to the geographical aspect, we  possibly would focus the analysis on the relief or height of its mountains, its  valleys, the composition of its energetic resources, or its flora and fauna  variety; that is, highlighting its natural aspects and leaving aside any human  presence, which would imply a passive vision of the regional analysis. Although  there may be places where the presence of individuals does not exist, the  analysis or study of that place necessarily requires at least of the presence  of the person in charge of the research. Therefore exists a difference between  what can be considered “the region” and what can be addressed as  “regionalization”. The first category involves the real and objective existence  of a determinate space. The second category contain the approach made by the  researcher or the way that inhabitants appropriates a space, and how their  relations emerge –an arduous task to do in all its magnitude–. It is very  complex to analyze a region that covers all its aspects at the time: physical,  biological, natural, political, social, and cultural. This complexity exists  because even though its analysis is multidisciplinary, in all possible analysis  we can make, the point of view of one discipline will always be enhanced. 
Key words: Region, production, culture, work.
Fecha  recepción:   Octubre 2014          Fecha  aceptación: Marzo  2015
Introduction
  In  social science, it is impossible to study a region or regionalize a space  without the presence of human beings. We cannot consider the region as an  island, independent of humans. It is necessary to incorporate the action  exerted by multiple factors, such as the legacies from the past, the  characteristics of the population, the political-institutional relations, or  the socio-cultural relations. That is why the regional studies are  methodologically discriminative, which does not makes them limited or without  meaning. This actually serves to orient research lines that demands to  determinate what is going to be researched and why; in other words, which are  the thematic contents to be addressed. However, we should not forget that  regional studies necessarily leads to the comprehension of the territory as an  integrated unit, whose dimensions are at the same time economic, political,  social, historical, and cultural. 
  In  consequence, regional studies are models that allows us to analyze a phenomena  that arise in a given space, and which characteristics makes it different (or  similar) to other regions. The perspective we intend to establish in this paper  relates with the analysis of the regional development, and for that purpose, we  consider a dynamic and systemic vision of the region and the regional. In this  vision, the elements from an economical nature have a great weight, but they  are not attach to these indicators or variables, because in order to boost  development, the economical elements are not enough, and it is necessary to  consider the social and cultural aspects as well as the political, the  administrative or the environmental ones.  
  A  particular element of analysis for this paper is to examine the role played by  the technological innovations, and the use of new technologies in the regional  development process. From our point of view, the technologies does not work in  abstract but they work correlated with cultures and specific knowledge from the  actors who promote them, use them, or drive them. 
  Some  interpretations questioned the role that the use of technologies took from the  productive systems, e.g. cheaper –or replace –the workforce, punishing workers  with a more intense exploitation process, or generating a bigger dependency to  the countries where there is not capacity to promote, encourage or support  scientific research. 
  This  paper stands on the idea that technology by itself is neither positive nor  negative, but that we give it substance in the way we use those technologies,  under what conditions and what perspectives. In this sense, we consider that  technology contributes to the local development process only if the technology  is associated with the process of transference and productive chains at the  interior of a region, and when is assumed, appropriated and interiorized by the  social actors of that community. 
In  order to follow the present analysis, it is first necessary to clarify an idea  that allow us to understand what it is and how we conceive the regional  development, and the importance that technological innovations and new  technologies have in this process. Secondly, we need to identify the social  subjects or the institutions that enable, encourage or limit the regional  development
Regional development 
  The  discussion on regional development is not new. Recovered from the classical  model of economic development, it stated that the growth of the economies was  the main generator of development, and that it was enough to foster an increase  in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) or to generate steady and sustained growth  rates to stimulate it. From this perception emerged the binomial relation  between development and underdevelopment, in which is stated that if some of  the countries were underdeveloped it was due the fact that they had not  modernized or because they lived under a technological backwardness. 
  Later,  it was found that growth was not enough to generate economic development, but  this problem is more related with a poor income distribution. For this reason,  the Government intervention was considered necessary for the elaboration of  distributive policies and for the substitution of imports, which gained  strength through the Keynesian proposals from the welfare State and that many  countries developed. However, the large fiscal deficit incurred by some  countries –specially in Latin America –linked to high levels of inflation and  the called debt crisis, questioned the Keynesian proposal, which was replaced  by the called structural adjust policies and the new Siren song for the  supremacy of the market and the globalization.  
  Regarding  regional studies, these took shape and importance, mainly through geographers,  which linked the natural space with the humanized landscape (human geography),  which later became known as economic geography or regional economy . In this  discipline, an impetus was provided originally to the theories of the location,  which gave great importance to the location of economic activities in the  territorial space, initially to agricultural activities and later to industrial  and service sectors. 
  Later,  that this was not considered enough either, so the state’s participation  through policies to promote the regions were considered necessary, and with  this emerged the plans and programs for the regional development. Later, it was  concluded the importance of giving a greater weight to the process of capital  accumulation, investment, competition, productivity, innovation, and promotion  and development of technologies. Detached from development theories, the  consideration was that underdeveloped countries could join the “development  train” if they could promote foreign investment and if they could encourage  exports. Eventually, the theories of center-periphery emerged in Latin America  and with them a new way of interpreting the regional. 
  Perroux  somehow contradicted the theories of localization by revealing that development  did not occur in a balanced way in all the regions. He determined, through the  theory of the development poles, that certain industries installed in a given  region became in promoters of development of a wider area, because from them it  was possible to encourage the economic activity beyond the sphere in which they  belonged originally. 
  With  some variations, the theory of the development poles still has a strong  influence in the regional studies. Nevertheless, recent investigations  supplemented it with elements of local or endogenous development policies,  which emphasize the use of internal resources (e.g. natural, human, financial…)  of a locality or a region. 
  Because  of the process of globalization and cultural imposition, we are under a vision  in which territoriality, locality and region tend to “disappear” or to become  less important in the analysis. In this sense, we speak about the concepts of  “deterritorialization” or “delocalization” hinting at the existence of a  “global market” in which the communities loss the importance and the sense of  being, because when you have these capital mobility and the inexistence of  borders, even the Nation-states lose their sense or any need to be. Yet,  reality has been the opposite, and the locality and the territory have been  strengthened not just as analysis categories but also as essential components  for the tasks of the local and regional life, due the fact that it is  impossible to produce and reproduce outside of a specific geographical space or  a local society. 
  From  this brief reflection, we can group the regional development theories in two  general categories: the first one of those who believes that the fundamental  factors of development come from outside or are promoted from the outside, i.e.  are exogenous based. The second category considers that the development  determinants or drivers have an internal nature, i.e. endogenous (see Salguero:  2006). 
  We  intended to highlight only some the theories, both exogenous and endogenous,  that we consider important, although the specific interest is still how the  innovation and the process of technological change boost regional development. 
  
  Regional development theories
  Classical  thoughts have the idea that the region is a delimitation of an economic and  social space, that is, how a given society establishes a model of production in  a given geographical space, exploiting its natural resources, which implies an  appropriation of the territory. However, the factor that determinates it as a  “region” is the productive and reproductive process for the survival of the  human species. In this sense, the region has its own personality and we should  study it individually. For the operation of the concept it was developed  initially the traditional visions of homogenous region, polarized region and  plan region or administrative. All three refer to single characteristic  (homogeneity, polarization or public action) and it does not take in  consideration the multiplicity of factors that interfere in a region. On the  other hand, based on them it was how the most important advances in the  regional analysis emerged. 
Early  theories considered external variables –as the investments– as essential  elements for development. These external variables were the starting point to  generate process of industrialization, and from the consolidation of them,  promote exports. This gave guidelines that –rather than promote development–  leaded to a dependency of underdeveloped countries to the developed countries,  which is why in recent times had emerged new analysis based on internal  capabilities of the region as engines of growth and development. 
Exogenous based theory 
  One  of the first development theories of geographical-regional nature was the  Hirschman’s theory, which explained that in order to develop a country it is  necessary to analyze case by case based on the exploitation of the resources of  each region (Salguero, 2006). Hirschman held that development was based on unbalanced  growth. In this sense, development is usually starts in one or in a few regions  of the country, creating agglomerations that subsequently drive development in  undeveloped regions.
  Transmission  forces would be the result of inter-regional commerce, plus capital transfers  and innovation from the first region to second one. In this way, economic  development of the first region cannot ever produce negative effects over the  other regions. Added to this, Hirschman argues that the migration originated by  the competitive advantages in human resources and the strong appeal of their  economic activities stablished in the more developed regions favors the  increase in the income per capita of the poorest regions via remittances, and  in turn, these favors developed regions with a cheaper cost of labor and the  primary resources that the region could have. Based on the theory of unbalanced  growth, he argues that the less developed regions will continue existing  besides the large regional clusters. However, optimism reapers when he argues  that in the long term the crowds tend decentralize due to external economies  and based on relocation, which generates a complementarity between regions. 
  Fritz  Voight (1964), who is also a supporter of the theory of unbalanced growth, says  that the most stagnant regions hardly can recover the lost ground because their  possibility of development will be limited by a process of thieving of its  natural resources, whether physical, human or capital. At the most, they can  trim differences if the poor area is specialized in primary activities in favor  of the rich area, and through complementarity of this ones in order to generate  industrial development that allow it to be independent.  
  Similarly,  Myrdal (1964), who developed the theory of cumulative causation, argues that  development in underdeveloped regions will not occur in a spontaneous way, and  that the positive effects that come from agglomeration to the developing zones  only can be possible as long as the development levels are high across the  country. Myrdal foresees the need to encourage investments –both private and  public –in order to create no so many agglomerations, and thus facilitate a  development transfer to other regions of the country. To do this, he aims that  equal opportunities and the development of a democratic system are necessary,  and therefore economic analysis should be complemented by a social and a  political analysis. His idea that growth is necessarily unbalanced, pushed in  some extend the theory of uneven development, which attempt to explain the  cause of the differences in development levels and rates among regions. 
Endogenous based theory 
  One  of the first endogenous based theories belongs to Alfred Weber, and it is known  as the theory of industrial location. We know that industry covers various  activities, from extraction of raw materials to the production process, and at  times, the sale of the final product (extraction, processing, installation and  service). Localization, in the other hand, refers to the location in which one  can have an amount of materials which can be ubiquitous, which apparently can  be found in any part of the territory –such as water or sand–, or the located,  that can be found only in specific spaces but are essential for the elaboration  of good produced by an industry. These are the ones in which localization has a  greater weight with the transport prices. The relation of the industrial  localization relates with the temporary changes in technology, or changes with  the techniques, the productivity, the human quality and the markets. 
  The  criticism against this theory is that it does not consider the costs for  resource extraction, nor the costs and limitations of storage for products or  used materials. Yet, in order to understand the industrial localization  phenomena, it is valuable to realize the idea that development is driven from  the very heart of the region. 
  Linked  to this idea, Christaller develops the theory of the localization of the  tertiary activities, which focuses the size and the distribution of the cities.  Although it is started from an static space (homogenous surface, balanced  demographic density, equal costs, similar supply for all the population and  depending services form the market area), the services are located in a central  point in relation with the clients, and generates maximum profit and an optical  supply. 
  Based  on this, appears a hierarchy of urban centers, where the main ones are  characterized by large settlements supported by activities of a highly  diversify tertiary sector, in which the service industry is highlighted as the  area with bigger influence. After this one, smaller hierarchies appear,  corresponding to smaller settlements and smaller service areas. In the same  way, the range’s length determines the price of the products. The central place  a single area, which has the bigger population, and then it continues  hierarchically, the middle and the small ones.  
  However,  if this theory considers the analysis of the industrial sector it distortions  the urban structure of the city, but also explains the regional analysis,  because although the function of the city is to provide services to the  dispersed population, the unequal distribution of the natural resources and the  people themselves, as well as different access to the markets and the disparity  of such access, makes the offer limited to generate adequate services.  Furthermore, industries tend to be located where resources, technological  innovations and proper work force exist. 
  Another  theory is Douglas C. North’s theory of export base, which explains that the  main element to develop a region is the ability to have a highly exportable  production, not necessarily abroad but in other regions in the country. Through  these export activities is possible to expand regional markets and to promote  new production activities for both the local and the regional market. Such  activity may be agricultural, tertiary, forestry, mining, or industrial. We can  determinate the regional development rhythm depending on the type of activity.  Undoubtedly, the growth will be bigger among diversify exports, which will make  that most dynamic industries gets attracted by this region. 
  This  theory, however, by promote the export factor neglects other factors such as  government intervention through spending, investments and consumption generated  in the region by fluctuations in migration, or leadership –regional politics,  economics or entrepreneurism. 
  Certainly,  one of the most important endogenous based theories is the theory of the  development poles. Proposed since the fifties by the French economist Francois  Perroux, the development poles theory explains the presence of industries that  promotes development from where they are installed, generating spillovers to a  wider region, so the investment in a developing pole affects other cities and  regions in terms of employment, population and technology. It starts from the  premise that in a geographical zone the industrial activities are stimulated in  order to promote and economic activity for a broader area. Its main importance  lies in the connection between growth, innovation and expansion (or dispersion)  that geographical spaces generate. Without doubt, this is the theory that  applies better for underdeveloped or developing countries. Perroux’s main idea  is progress, but this must be understood under three different but interrelated  meanings: economic progress (when the richness volume increases), social  progress (when the welfare of everybody increases), and technological progress  (when the productivity increases through new technologies implementation). In  this sense, underdevelopment should not be seen as a situational issue, but as  a blockage to growth and as a domain of the more developed countries to the  peripheral countries, and as a disarticulation of the structure of these  peripheral countries (see Guillen, 2005). Disarticulation establishes an  absence in the prices unit worldwide, and in the monetary fluctuations and  information’s dissemination. Promotion of development under this perspective  should be therefore endogenous, global and integrated. That is, to base  everything in the internal strengths and resources, in a way that can embrace  the completely human perspectives (social and cultural) and not just the  economics, and that can integrate the differences and provide cohesion between  regions and sectors. 
  The  development poles theory as regional development strategy would imply then that  a motor industry would have an advanced technology level and a high degree of  concentration. This would also have to develop a big part of the productive  factors and services (inputs) that would incorporate to the productive process  whether workforce, inputs or natural resources of the zone. Salguero (2006)  notes that develop poles are “an interlinked industrial complex around a  dynamic central industry through a series of input-output linkages in the  market (that) are used to support actions of regional policies aimed (…) to  develop”.  
  Another  element of the development poles theory says that products should be sold in  different markets than its location. Hence, the industry engine should be able  to transmit economic development to the surrounding area through a spillover  effect (either positive or negative) towards its hinterland. The way to measure  this development, would be primarily through the per capita income and the  productive structure. However, one of the main criticisms of this theory is  that market cannot contribute to the most backwards regions by itself, so is  necessary government intervention trough infrastructure, investment from state  companies, or investment incentives trough subsidies, preferential loans and  incentives trough tax reduction and the provision of public goods.  
  In  these terms, the development poles theory is associated to the promotion of new  business or institutionalized industries through public intervention and  “planning ”, seeking  better living conditions for the inhabitants in the surrounding areas. Those  companies not only would produce changes in the hinterland through innovation,  but also legal and political changes in the institutions of urban centers where  they are installed.
  Another  problem that arises for the development poles theory is that its impulses are  mostly done through imports of technology and external capital, which under the  logic of the economics domain, developed by Perroux, does not promotes the  regional interest but the interest of transnational corporations, that from the  regional or territorial perspective involves the phenomena of relocalization  and deterritorialization in this era of globalization that doesn’t supports the  regional development of a country.
  A  contribution to development poles theory was established by Schumpeter, He said  regions could reach develop through the role played by innovations, which  refers to several elements or forms for its promotion: 1) the productive use of  an invention, which can occur with the introduction of a new good or by a  simply change in quality; 2) new production methods, which not necessarily  involve scientific discoveries; 3) the search for new markets; 4) find new  sources of primal materials; or 5) the establishment of a new organization  (Salguero, op cit., pp. 13-14). 
  From  all these we can understand that territorial development, assumed as local and  endogenous, requires of innovation processes to promote its own development.  Still, it should be understood that innovation not only implies a technological , but also an  organizational dimension, as well as collaboration between business, market and  government. We will come back to this discussion eventually. 
Development should be local 
  In  this paper, we start from the idea that development can only be local. Based on  Perroux’s idea that growth does not appear at the same time everywhere, but in  certain obvious points –or poles –, with different intensity and different  mechanisms but into the economy as a whole (Boisier; 1006: 51), obligatory  implies a geographical local phenomena, but not necessarily a phenomena of  national or global nature, as it doesn’t exist any place in the world in which  development was homogenous in a whole territory.  
  Even  the considered most developed countries have economic areas underdeveloped or  less developed than the rest. There are rich and poor neighborhoods in the  United States and Mexico. Therefore, we would argue that development is uneven  between regions. This makes that the center-periphery phenomena became not only  a category of analysis among countries but also a correlation of forces within  the same nation. We could also point that –according with dependency theory–  development of some regions cohabits with the underdeveloped of other regions,  whether for economic or political dominance of the prevailing institutions,  unequal exchange between regions or dominion over markets. Considering that  development is a homogenous phenomenon, it is rather the result of analytical  abstractions that have been made out of the objective reality. In any case, a country  is considered more developed than other because it has a larger area of its  population and its territory under this developed condition. 
  In  this regard, we believe that develop is –or should be– of a fundamental local  matter, and that is interwoven not only with economic characteristics, but also  social, cultural and technical from a specific place. It depends, in addition,  to its own evolution or trajectory which starts at a given point –or possibly  in several points, but not in all at the same time –and occasionally spreads  over a wider area. which necessarily implies a territorial process, conditioned  by the ability and willingness of its protagonists, its resources and  potentialities, which can have more or less success, depending of the right interrelations  of that local area with the national and international elements of development.
  From  this perspective, it is clear that the current globalization processes disrupt  and modify the notion of region and regionalization, as previous joints between  society and territory are transformed, which does not mean that the region  disappear. Concepts like “deterritorialization” or relocation belongs to  categories that explain the notions of the transformations suffered by the  regions. These notions come from all previous interpretations but it does not  mean that the concepts of region or regionalization are not used any longer, or  that they do not serve to interpret the present. However, this should lead to  referential variables that give operability to the concept itself, since this  is not only an “objective” and rational reality, but it’s, beyond anything, a  lived space. From this perspective, the region is both a physical and a mental  construction. For this reason, the region will historically continue expressing  its importance, as the region –or the regionalization –is essentially the way  in which human beings can relate with each other, with the nature, and with  their economic, political and cultural surroundings. What allow us to keep  talking about region and regionalization is “the fact that social groups build  spaces for exchange and mutual identification, in which they perform preferably  the activities that join them together” (Hiernaux-Nicolas; 2002: 429). Whether  actions between human beings are social, economic or political, they will be  actions limited by a geographical space, that is, “spatialized” actions.  
  Under  this scheme of interpretation, the central column of this article is the thesis  of territorial development, understood as a specific geographical local space,  and therefore mainly promoted by endogenous factors as its natural resources  (water, mines, agriculture, livestock), human resources (training, scientific  and technological knowledge), economic resources (investment, capital accumulation,  infrastructure) and cultural resources (tradition, idiosyncrasies). It is also  believed that innovation and technological change play a determinant role in  this kind of development. 
Defining territorial development
  Territorial  development is considered as “the set of social, cultural and economic  processes that promote economic dynamism and improves the life’s quality of the  population in a territory” (Boisier, in Amezcua; 2014: 67). However,  globalization, technological advances and digital communication strongly  influence this space and do not allow the territory to be isolated nor closed.  External influences (politics, culture, or any other) have an impact and lead  to change the region to a lesser or greater degree. In this sense, every  territory must be analyzed as an open system because in it good and services  are changed in other territories or nations. There are also external cultural  and ideological influences (different ways to dress, to be and to live) that  doesn’t end with traditions and idiosyncrasies, but do modify them through  different mechanisms (media, consumerism, customs, innovation, adaptation).  Boisier himself had to expand the definition of territorial space, considering  it as a set of attributes based in its economic structure and that affects the  welfare of its population and its natural resources. A fundamental element of  the territorial development is to overcome poverty, hunger and discrimination,  and to promote political, economic and social freedom. 
  Please  note that this definition rescues the essential elements of the human  development, but also in the sense of the sustainability of the territory, that  is, the rational use of the natural resources. Under this perspective, the  territory is the main center and subject for development, but not as an  independent actor or as an empty space that serves as a container for the  scenery of the social process, but as the result of those processes; and it is  built from them as a social and historical lived space, as a “process in construction  made by its own territorial community, which means that the territorial  community needs to be the author, manager and beneficiary of its own  development”  (Suárez; 2014: 38). 
  This  development must be comprehensive, but also multidimensional and productively  multisectorial, based on a schedule that considers the interrelations between  the various actors, including the participation of the state through regional  policies. For this reason, it must also be sustainable in its economic,  political and social levels. 
  From  an economic point of view, Boisier (in Amezcua) says that territorial  developments depend on six basic factors: capital accumulation, knowledge  accumulation, workforce accumulation, a national project with a high  territorial profile, economic policies (sectorial, national, and global) and  the demand (national and international). At the same time, he points to three  different approaches for the local development: a) local development as a  matrix for diverse industrial structures; b) local development as an endogenous  process of structural change; and c) local development as “empowerment” of  local society.
It is clear that the process of globalization is not expanding in a homogeneous way to the interior of a national territory, neither to the rest of the countries around the world. It would be highly “globalized” regions, it will be another’s that would reach that point only relatively, and another regions who will be aside, either by opposition, resistance or mismatch, and that will subsist as marginalized regions or that even could be impoverish by this process. In this sense, a nation can establish a mosaic of various responses and interactions with the outside world. However, there are global elements that affect the regions independently of their responsiveness, and that hardly can be detached from themselves, which produces profound changes in the regional analysis. These variables are: 1) financialization of the economy, 2) new technologies that promote changes in the production systems, and 3) markets supremacy.
In this situation, territorial development assumes as strategies the efforts to boost technological change, to promote I+D innovation, and the capacity of organization of its social actors. However, the chance that this is achieved depends entirely of the factual territorial situations, so we cannot have only one answer. The experience gained in the region analysis, describe a range of situations in which promotion of the I+D has serious difficulties or limitations for its implementation. For example, there are regions that elaborate products of medium and high technological content, with a production process that is complex and orientated to foreign markets, and that have laboratories or departments that promote the research of new technologies; and there is other smaller regions with a small local production for local markets where there is a strong presence of small producers and micro industries –even informal producers –, who have production processes with light technology and that are located in urban or rural areas, in which I+D is impossible to promote. In Mexico, e.g., in many regions and companies, the use of technology is limited or comes from other country, or is bought primarily with foreign capital.
Technological changes and  regional development
  In  recent years, there has been increasing interest in analyzing the effects of  technological changes in the economic growth and social development, but at the  same time, it has been some attempts to overcome the commercial “determinism”  that combines technology with industrial and commercial activities, in order to  generate manufacturing processes or export manufacturing products, or its  optimization. Therefore, we should clarify that technological changes does not  refers only to the devices that are discovered or invented, nor does it refers  to the activities or processes carried out in a company or work unit, and nor  the reduce of the experience, nor the knowledge of handling a new machine nor  the “know-how”. From our perspective, technological changes mean an  interrelation of all these factors. 
Technological changes and  territorial development
  Technology,  as an explanation of growth and development, have its origins –in a more  specific way –in the development theories of Robert Solow. Through a  mathematical function, he stated that production depends from capital  investment, the use of workforce and the technological level. Yet,  technological progress was considered as an exogenous variable to the model,  which was unsatisfactory because if the growth do not happens at the interior,  then cannot be considered as growth. 
  Based  on the ideas of Joseph Schumpeter on the role of technology –and  innovation–endogenous development models were created. Concepts as  knowledge-based economy, national systems of innovation knowledge management,  technological learning, new vision of intellectual property, and technological  paradigms, were some of the categories that were developed in the analysis of  growth, innovation and technology theories.   
  We  need to remember that Schumpeter’s main idea about the entrepreneur does not  have its focus in the fact that he is the owner of the production or that he is  the one who performing the investments. Schumpeter thinks that the entrepreneur  is the person able to innovate, even if he is not the one who creates the new  inventions. In other words, the entrepreneur is the person who promote economic  growth (or development). In this sense, for Schumpeter, innovation is the  establishment of a new production function. In addition, we need to think that  innovation is the origin of all these cycles. In this regard, the main  characteristic of the development of capitalism is the introduction of new  combinations, an endogenous process that Schumpeter called creative  destruction, and that constantly revolutionizes the economic structure of the  system, in which the profit pursuit remains as the main objective. In perspective,  technological changes –understood as physical changes in equipment, tools,  automatic engines, or inventions –are necessarily attached to the innovation  process, involving its implementation, change in the production models, or  different ways of doing a work. 
  Recently,  authors as Luc Soete (in Aboites and Corona: 2011) place greater emphasis on  the impacts of globalization. Soete considers that investigation and  technological development are concentrated in a few leading countries, or in a  reduced group of oligopolistic firms in very specific regions. The accumulative  evidence in Soete’s studies prove that technological change rather than reduce  the gap between rich and poor countries, has expanded it in a bigger degree of  concentration, centralizing the capital. This would suggest that developing  countries could not drive technological changes. 
  This  necessarily leads us to redeem the concept of endogeneity, which involves  detecting own natural, human, institutional, and organizational potentialities,  based in knowledge strategies, experience and territorial solidarity through  the affirmation of the identity and an associative management between  representatives of the government, private industries and education and  innovation institutions (I+D centers), and to link them with the global  markets.
  Cuervo  and Morales (2009) said that endogenous growth models have to do with the  assumption that “growth directly depends to technological change, which is done  by the decisions of international economic agents seeking to maximize their  profits” (p.373). However, this “endogeneity” of technological change in the  classic model is controlled by companies with increasing returns and imperfect  competition, which leads to increase regional inequality. 
  That  is, a truly endogenous model is based “on the territorial system of each  locality where local resources (natural, cultural, human, technological,  economic, institutional, and materials) forms its development potential, that  is, the capacity to generate a certain amount of richness (material, human,  cultural, or spiritual) to ensure… the raising in the level of welfare and  progress” (Morett and Cosío; 2013: 139). 
  This  development potential is related with other natural resources (land, forests,  mines…) but also technological, enabling the exploitation of its productive  infrastructure and workforce (skilled people in working age, with a level of  education, training, and experience). To all this, we should add the cultural  elements (capacity to learn, to innovate, to organize, and to adapt to new  situations), the expertise –as Morett and Cosío mentioned– which involves a  social learned knowledge and that permits a specialized work, sometimes even  with an ancestral background. That is, regional growth is based in its conditions  and interior dynamics. 
  Sánchez  Pérez (1991) describes in a more profound way the relations generated between  technology and space. In his analysis about innovations, he argues that “(1)  new technologies are shaping up as one of the most dynamic areas of human  performance in the twentieth century, but we cannot forget that every human  activity takes place in a geographical area from which we take advantage of,  but that also imposes constrains” (p. 191). A dual process of adaptation must  also occur, as when new technologies are deployed they modify the space  according with the needs of those new technologies. At the same time, the  space, with its own characteristics, requires that new technologies adapts  themselves, due the fact that they are implemented in several ways, according  with the geographical space in which they are installed. 
  The  author is right when he questions who is leading the process of technological  innovation. The answer is clear and unequivocal: those who performs the  management and the appropriation of the economic surplus i.e. profit. This  means that when new technologies are installed, they produce changes in the  economic and social structures, and its effect can be many and diverse.  
  One  of the functions that change with the use of new technologies is the use of the  space as a resource, as a provider of primal materials that can be modified  (agricultural industries). Lands use can be transformed from extensive to  intensive, the animal feeding can change, as well as its evolution (genetic  engineering) or the use of the plants (biotechnology). Sánchez Pérez points out  that with the new spatial division of labor generated by the use of new  technologies, the traditional rural areas can transmute to rural-tertiary  areas. Similarly, manufacture industries can use new materials (PVC or  synthetic materials for footwear or clothing production), or may simply stay  outside the scope of modern technology if local raw materials are not  undertaken or not transfer is generated in the place where it is installed.  Furthermore, automation and robotic processes increase production levels  without using a huge workforce, which promotes the growth of unemployment  rates, which is –in Marxist terms –the increase in the industrial reserve army. 
  A  function  -we shall call  it self-defense of the space –that modifies itself and it is not widely studied  in the analysis, is the environmental relation. If previously –e.g. with the  conventional farming methods –was possible to achieve a relative conservation  of the ecosystems, today, with the use of transgenic, biofuels and  biotechnology this is seriously damaged. The technology is not transferred  because it involves direct investment process (installation of multinationals)  often turn out to be highly polluting, generating externalities that are never  obligated to pay for, or they can usually be predatory with the natural  resources, leaving the territory behind with a strong pollution in the air or  the water, and natural resources insufficiency. 
  Yet,  the use of new technologies is important, and it is possible to achieve it in  benefit of sustainable development. Dutrénit (2011) analyses how some companies  in developing countries have been able to achieve leadership through the  creation of its own technological capacities. He points that the use of  technology begins in embryonic forms, up to the construction of advanced  strategic capabilities with a management and exploitation of a higher pool of  technological knowledge in fields that are important to them. This depends on  the ability of the countries to insert in a learning path to develop national  technological capabilities, which are only possible through linkage in local,  regional, national and international level. 
  According  to other authors (Kim, Amsden and Hobday), in order to achieve this, it is  necessary a process of “invert innovation”, which consist in the acquisition of  technology, then assimilation, then socialization of its use, and–with a higher  learning –its adaptation. Subsequently, the use of the technology improves and  it can be use internally, this is, “tropicalize” its activity, and finally it  is possible to generate it into the country. As evidence of this, we have the  case of the Asian emerging economies.
  However,  this analysis is not intended to be subject of technological determinism. As we  already pointed, technology does hand in hand with the process of constant  innovation, and in order to generate truly development, they should be applied  at territorial, local, and endogenous levels. 
Genuine innovation and  territorial development 
  Under  a broader view of the concept of innovation, we would distinguish those  interpretations that are considered restricted and that belongs exclusively to  the technological dimension, and those that are considered genuine and that  transcend the conventional categories of the use of technology. 
  “The  analysis of the genuine territorial innovations constitutes a source of  enormous importance to the better understanding of the factors and processes  that lead to economic development and the enrichment of the theoretical  heritage that is built around the concept of territorial development” (de León;  2010: 131). We cannot continue importing external instruments and strategies of  development, it is necessary to promote our own experiences and to promote  projects based in the appropriated values of a region. Genuine innovation is a  prerequisite for development, and this have to emerge from the local social  actors, combining the specific structural conditions –or the exogenous– with its  culture, its traditions, its experience, its values and its knowledge in order  to address them. The role is then focused on the own community, where knowledge  is generated at social level and with the relationships with the government.  This results in a participatory approach to all organizational instances  –formal and at times informal–; this must be sustainable in competitiveness but  also in cooperation and equity (coopetition). 
  In  this sense, if we search for a more sustainable development in a region, that  is at the time more inclusive and more democratic, we must first examine the  regional reality, analyze it, and consider that the changes experimented in it  are not immune to the experimented changes in the international macroeconomic  contexts, but there is an overlap between the different factors at national and  transnational scale, which outline the transformations in the way of  development and the industrialization levels that operate locally. 
  Nonetheless,  it is clear that either development is local or it does not exist. For this  reason, is important to rescue the concept of endogeneity, which involves the  ability of the region to manage itself with its own resources in a given  territory. In this sense, it is also clear that the resources as a concept  embraces not only both human and material resources, but also those related  with the experience, abilities, manual dexterity, local wisdom, and bonds of  reciprocity or mutual aid. 
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