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topics:institutions [2026/03/18 09:57] admintopics:institutions [2026/03/18 10:44] (current) admin
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-<WRAP catbadge blue>General Topics</WRAP>+<WRAP catbadge blue>Institutions & Markets</WRAP>
  
 ====== Institutions ====== ====== Institutions ======
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 updated: 18 March 2026 updated: 18 March 2026
 sensitivity: medium sensitivity: medium
-ai-disclosure:  Claude Sonnet 4.6 (Anthropic) assisted with topic structuring, editorial revision, reference verification, and formatting; reviewed by Vitaliy Soloviy, 17.03.2026+ai-disclosure:  Claude Sonnet 4.6 (Anthropic) assisted with topic structuring, editorial revision, reference verification, and formatting; reviewed by Vitaliy Soloviy, 17.03.2026
 </WRAP> </WRAP>
  
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 ===== A shared definition ===== ===== A shared definition =====
  
-Institutions are the formal and informal rules, norms, and shared expectations that structure how actors in electricity systems interact, make decisions, and coordinate.((North, D. C. (1990). //Institutions, institutional change and economic performance.// Cambridge University Press.)) Douglas North described them as "the humanly devised constraints that structure political, economic and social interactions." Walton Hamilton offered a complementary framing: institutions as "a way of thought or action of some prevalence and permanence, which is embedded in the habit of a group or the customs of a people." +Institutions are the formal and informal rules, norms, and shared expectations that structure how actors in electricity systems interact, make decisions, and coordinate. They can be seen as "the humanly devised constraints that structure political, economic and social interactions."((North, D. C. (1990). //Institutions, institutional change and economic performance.// Cambridge University Press.))  There are three commonly agreed types of institutions, each operating through different mechanisms and affecting actor behaviour in different ways:((Scott, W. R. (2014). //Institutions and organizations: Ideas, interests, and identities// (4th ed.). SAGE Publications.))
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-For smart grid transitions, W. Richard Scott's framework distinguishes three types of institution, each operating through different mechanisms and affecting actor behaviour in different ways:((Scott, W. R. (2014). //Institutions and organizations: Ideas, interests, and identities// (4th ed.). SAGE Publications.))+
  
 ^ ^ Regulative ^ Normative ^ Cultural-cognitive ^ ^ ^ Regulative ^ Normative ^ Cultural-cognitive ^
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 **Institutions vs. organisations** \\ **Institutions vs. organisations** \\
 Institutions are the rules of the game. Organisations are groups of individuals bound by a common purpose who operate within those rules. A regulatory body is an organisation; the regulations it enforces are institutions. Although organisations can be considered formalised institutions, institutions are more than organisations — their main characteristic is their permanence and the expectations they embed in practice.((North, D. C. (1990). //Institutions, institutional change and economic performance.// Cambridge University Press.)) Institutions are the rules of the game. Organisations are groups of individuals bound by a common purpose who operate within those rules. A regulatory body is an organisation; the regulations it enforces are institutions. Although organisations can be considered formalised institutions, institutions are more than organisations — their main characteristic is their permanence and the expectations they embed in practice.((North, D. C. (1990). //Institutions, institutional change and economic performance.// Cambridge University Press.))
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-<WRAP distinction> 
-**Regulatory sandboxes vs. regulatory innovation experiments** \\ 
-Sandboxes provide temporary rule modifications so that innovators can test solutions within a protected space. Regulatory innovation experiments are designed to test new regulatory approaches themselves, generating evidence about how rules could be improved.((Bauknecht, D., & Kubeczko, K. (2024). Regulatory experiments and real-world labs. //GAIA//, 33(S1), 44–50. https://doi.org/10.14512/gaia.33.S1.7)) 
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