Multi-Level Perspective
Definition
The Multi-Level Perspective (MLP) is a socio-technical theory that analyzes transitions across three nested levels: micro-level niches, meso-level regimes, and macro-level landscapes. It provides a framework for understanding how radical innovations emerge, stabilize, and eventually transform or replace existing systems.
Key Characteristics
- Nested Structure: Operates across three distinct analytical levels (niche, regime, landscape).
- Socio-technical focus: Recognizes that technological change is inseparable from social, cultural, and political contexts.
- Dynamic Interaction: Explains how macro-level pressures (landscape) create windows of opportunity for innovations (niches) to destabilize incumbent practices (regimes).
- Operational Alignment: Serves as a mechanism to analyze how organizational units, such as GBS units, function as “operational airlocks” to translate external pressures into strategic internal transitions.
Applications
- Analyzing the progression of the Twin Transition within multinational corporations.
- Predicting technological trends that may destabilize existing industry regimes.
- Understanding the diffusion of innovations from protected niche environments into mainstream market applications.
- Evaluating the impact of policy and external environmental pressures on organizational infrastructure.
Mentions in Source
- “The Multi-Level Perspective (MLP) framework analyzes socio-technical transitions across three nested levels of increasing structuration: micro-level niches (the locus of radical innovations), meso-level socio-technical regimes (stable systems of rules and practices), and macro-level landscapes (exogenous global pressures on regimes).” — _ID-306_Current_Version