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Novation Management Methodology in Design of Regional Sustainable Development Systems with the Use of Universal Measurable Values


Ekaterina F. SHAMAEVA
Abstract

The present paper presents the methodological basis for managing innovations using universal stable values. It is shown that the majority of studies devoted to the problem of managing innovations are verbally performed; there is no parametric image of innovations meeting the requirements of measurability and proportionality, but innovations as a subject of management and a control object are recorded using unstable monetary measures. The author’s definition of a system and a system of sustainable development is introduced. A system is a part of a whole with distinguished spatio-temporal boundaries and a structure (connections between elements). The system of sustainable development is a system with specified conditions (requirements) of sustainable development.The methodological basis of this work is the science of sustainable development (Bolshakov BE, 1988 - 2018). The science of sustainable development is represented by a series of works presenting the formalized principle of sustainable development and the laws of conservation and change of the real world systems (social, socio-economic, ecological and other systems). In the science of sustainable development, the real world systems (social, socioeconomic, ecological, and other systems) are regarded as living systems in the natural science sense, that is, as systems open in energy flows with non-zero energy flows within and out of the system.The present paper presents the methodology in the design of regional sustainable development systems. The rules for calculating the capabilities and the needs of multi-level regional systems are presented, as well as methodological support for monitoring and evaluating innovations using universal stable values (consumer and exchange value, profitability of innovations in terms of universal values, speculative capital in terms of universal measures, price index).

Volume 11 | 08-Special Issue

Pages: 329-338