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Appointment
- Student
- Inst for Innovation and Public Purpose
- Faculty of the Built Environment
Biography
Keno Haverkamp is a PhD candidate in innovation and public policy at IIPP, under the supervision of Dr Antonio Andreoni and Professor Rainer Kattel.
Before joining IIPP, Keno worked as a Research Economist for the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) in Vienna. He holds an MPhil in Development Studies from the University of Cambridge and a B.Sc. in International Business and Politics from the Copenhagen Business School.
Keno’s PhD is funded through a research project where he works for the OECD Observatory for Public Sector Innovation on challenge-driven innovation policies and organisations in Europe. He is also coordinating IIPP’s Theory Reading Group.
Before joining IIPP, Keno worked as a Research Economist for the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) in Vienna. He holds an MPhil in Development Studies from the University of Cambridge and a B.Sc. in International Business and Politics from the Copenhagen Business School.
Keno’s PhD is funded through a research project where he works for the OECD Observatory for Public Sector Innovation on challenge-driven innovation policies and organisations in Europe. He is also coordinating IIPP’s Theory Reading Group.
Research Summary
Keno's research focusses on Green Industrial Policies and the political economy thereof.
He is particularly interested in the manufacturing aspects of Germany’s Energiewende (energy transition) and the lessons to be learnt for development economics. His wider research interests include the political economy of development, structural change, innovation, premature deindustrialisation, and the role of the state in development.
He is particularly interested in the manufacturing aspects of Germany’s Energiewende (energy transition) and the lessons to be learnt for development economics. His wider research interests include the political economy of development, structural change, innovation, premature deindustrialisation, and the role of the state in development.
Teaching Summary
PGTA for MPA course 'Grand Challenges and System Change' (2021/2022)
PGTA for MPA course 'Creative Bureaucracies' (2020/2021)