“…In a relational perspective, they have foregrounded university‐enterprise collaboration, in particular with the knowledge‐intensive industries, or university spin‐offs, in particular from STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics)‐focused universities and research centres (Benneworth & Charles, 2005). HEIs have further been considered integral core components in geographical conceptualizations, such as building regional innovation systems (Asheim & Gertler, 2005; Asheim et al, 2011; Cooke, 1992), learning regions (Morgan, 1997), creative regions or milieus (Fromhold‐Eisebith, 1995; Malecki, 1987) or regional innovative ecosystems (Thomas et al, 2021). What these concepts have in common is that they aim to understand locations' and regions' increased potential for innovative activity that cannot be explained solely by statistic indicators and goes beyond notions of knowledge and innovation being produced at and spilling over from HEIs.…”