Dr Khavandkar’s research operates at the nexus of innovation geography, international business strategy, and higher education policy. Drawing on an interdisciplinary background in economics and industrial engineering, he investigates how emerging technologies and co-creative frameworks can mitigate structural vulnerabilities within global value chains and modernise the institutional architectures of higher education. By bridging the gap between industrial digital transformation and pedagogical innovation, his work seeks to resolve complex challenges in both global market integration and future-proofed knowledge exchange.
Current Research Interests:
Regional Innovation Systems and Global Resilience: Exploring the co-evolution of entrepreneurial ecosystems and place-based innovation. He focuses on how algorithmic discovery and distributed innovation models foster regional resilience and collaborative value creation within an increasingly globalised economy, emphasising the role of Global Innovation Networks (GINs).
Interdisciplinary Innovation Policy in Transnational Contexts: Researching the application of multi-lens analysis to science and technology policy. This work focuses on the spatial dynamics of innovation systems, exploring how national policies interact with global trade flows to shape high-tech industrial clusters and cross-border knowledge exchange.
Distributed Innovation and Global Digital Maturity: Exploring how platform-based innovation allows firms to manage distributed digital maturity. This research identifies the mechanisms that allow SMEs to participate in sophisticated, cross-border digital ecosystems, linking place-based innovation to international scaling.
SME Innovation and the ‘Capability Paradox’: Investigating the strategic integration of Foundational Models and Agentic AI within small-to-medium enterprises. This research explores the digital divide, examining how AI-mediated co-creation and platform-based innovation enable resource-constrained firms to navigate geoeconomic fragmentation, overcome institutional voids, and enhance export resilience.
The Business School of the Future: Developing future-proofed curriculum models grounded in the ‘Twin Transition’ - the synergistic advancement of digital transformation and green sustainability. This research examines the scaling of transprofessionalism and epistemic fluency within the context of Transnational Education (TNE).
Authentic Business Learning (ABL) and Competency-Based Frameworks: Investigating the transition from passive pedagogical models to practice-led capability building. His research explores how ABL facilitates competency-based curriculum design, creating a ‘cognitive realism’ that bridges the gap between academic theory and professional practice.
Equitable Digital Pedagogy: Exploring the institutionalisation of Authentic Business Learning (ABL) through Agentic AI frameworks. His work investigates how synthetic business environments and autonomous scenario modelling can democratise access to high-stakes knowledge exchange while ensuring curricula remain culturally responsive and internationalised (IoC).
Agentic AI in Business Education: Analysing the shift from static prompt-response interactions to dynamic, nonlinear AI workflows. He focuses on how agentic systems- capable of autonomous task planning and multi-agent collaboration- can simulate complex business ecologies, reducing the ‘transitional gap’ between the university and the global labour market.
Institutionalising Co-production: Researching the systemic integration of co-productive pedagogies to bridge the gap between academic theory and industrial practice. This includes investigating the role of University-Industry Linkages (UILs) in fostering place-based economic development through the ‘students-as-partners’ model.
Current Research Projects
Interdisciplinary AI Competency Framework for Higher Education: This funded multi-institutional research project, comprising UCL, UEL, SDU, and UoB Dubai, aims to develop sector-ready curriculum tools for AI literacy with an explicit focus on digital equity. The initiative establishes an interdisciplinary framework that bridges the gap between technical AI capabilities and pedagogical practice, ensuring the integration of Agentic AI and Foundational Models remains inclusive and ethically grounded.
Beyond the Prospectus: Authentic Student Journeys in Higher Education: This funded multi-institutional research and civic initiative employs a ‘students-as-partners’ framework to co-create authentic narratives that challenge traditional deficit-based aspiration models. By positioning students as primary co-creators of knowledge, the project critically examines the complexities of transition, institutional belonging, and structural inequality within the UK Higher Education landscape.
Authentic Business Learning: A Developmental Education Strategy: This project focuses on the synthesis of competency-based education, constructivism, and critical pedagogy into a unified developmental strategy. By employing a social realist lens, the study investigates how these theoretical frameworks can be institutionalised to support Authentic Business Learning architectures and bridge the gap between theory and practice.
Bridging the Capability Paradox: Resilience and Value Co-creation in Regional Innovation Districts: This research project investigates the complex dynamics of value co-creation and industrial co-evolution within high-growth innovation districts and tech superclusters in the UK. The study examines how hyper-connectivity and ‘institutional stickiness’ mitigate the capability paradox in resource-constrained firms, identifying how platform-based orchestration can be leveraged to foster sovereign economic resilience.