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Market failures and market framings: Can a market be transformed from the inside?
Author(s)
Date Issued
2017-08-19
Abstract
How do actors innovate markets in cases of perceived market failures? This paper’s aim is to examine what happens when a market is innovated or, as we call it, ‘redevised’ in situations where public and commercial interests significantly diverge. Market devices can serve an important function in such attempts to innovate markets: they are material and/or social arrangements that are put into place to shape the market in question in certain ways. But can such devices really transform a market from within? To examine this question we trace the history of the Geneva Medicines Patent Pool, a civil society initiative introduced to change pharmaceutical firms’ licensing and collaboration practices in the market for HIV/AIDS medicines. Our empirical results indicate that redevising a market in response to market failures can shift the market’s frames and contribute to altering its practices, but that this is a pragmatic and often lengthy process that is never fully predictable in advance. By attending to the intended and unintended consequences - or misfires - of redevising a market, our study raises important questions around acting in and on the market, market innovation’s’ ontological impact, zooming in and zooming out when studying redevising, and attending to the temporality of market innovation.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Sage
Journal
Organization Studies
Volume
39
Issue
10
Start Page
1357
End Page
1376
Copyright (Published Version)
2017 Sage
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Name
Geiger_and_Gross_Org_Studies_final_submitted_version.pdf
Size
735.49 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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