- To become a knowledge hub, it is necessary to produce knowledge. This requires encouragement of research and development, by private firms and within universities.
- Production of knowledge requires creative people. They must be attracted from all over the world and local people must be encouraged and facilitated in becoming creative knowledge workers.
- A hub is not simply an agglomeration of companies that produce knowledge, but that in addition these companies must be well connected to each other as well as to other hubs in a global knowledge network. Is it only the Singaporeans who are saying this? No, this is pretty much the consensus. The following definitions were taken from an academic discussion of knowledge clusters and hubs (http://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/8778/1/MPRA_paper_8778.pdf):
- Knowledge clusters are agglomerations of organisations that are production-oriented. Their production is primarily directed to knowledge as output or input. Knowledge clusters have the organisational capability to drive innovations and create new industries. They are central places within an epistemic landscape, i.e. in a wider structure of knowledge production and dissemination. Examples for organisations in knowledge clusters are universities and colleges, research institutions, think tanks, government research agencies and knowledge-intensive firms.
- Knowledge hubs are not identical to knowledge clusters though they are co-located and may be nested within clusters.
- Knowledge hubs are local innovation systems that are nodes in networks of knowledge production and knowledge sharing. They are characterised by high connectedness and high internal and external networking and knowledge sharing capabilities. As meeting points of communities of knowledge and interest, knowledge hubs fulfill three major functions: to generate knowledge, to transfer knowledge to sites of application; and to transmit knowledge to other people through education and training.
Prerequisites for making Sri Lanka (Gampaha District) a knowledge hub
Mar 01, 2010 (LBO) - Sri Lanka is to become a "Naval, Aviation, Commercial, Energy and Knowledge hub." According to Basil Rajapaksa, the leader of the ruling coalition’s Gampaha District slate for the Parliamentary Elections, that District will be the site of the aviation and knowledge hubs.
What is needed to achieve this vision ? And is there any special reason for the Gampaha District being designated the site of the future knowledge hub?
What is a knowledge hub?
Singapore pioneered the practice of appending the word “hub” to various subjects and then saying that it would become Asia’s hub in medicine, knowledge, aviation, etc.. And it has not been all hot air. Singapore has succeeded in many hub-like activities. Therefore, it is not a bad source for guidance.
Singapore’s 2006 Budget Speech (http://www.mof.gov.sg/budget_2006/budget_speech/header2.html; see annex 1 for the relevant extracts) is pretty much a treatise on the subject.
The key elements are: