Paper/Speech Details of Conference Program for the 26th NISPAcee Annual Conference Program Overview PhD pre-conference seminar Author(s) Judit Szakos Ludovika University of Public Service Budapest Hungary Title Sustainable and Inclusive Innovation? – How the Quintuple Helix Model works in Practice File Paper files are available only for conference participants, please login first. Presenter Judit Szakos Abstract Since global financial and holistic crises in 2008 it gets more and more attention in national level to rise long term well-being instead of short term success. Within international organizations, like the United Nations and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development sustainable and inclusive growth are cardinal issues. There are many policies and strategies in every level to support these green goals and to reflect to ongoing and future economic challenges in practice, in public policy level. According to theoretical models one could find a wide spectrum of perspectives. In this paper I examine one of the non-linear innovation models, called the Quintuple Helix Model. This extended model of Triple Helix is about knowledge circulation between education, economic and political system, as well as media and culture-based society and natural environment of society constitute to this non-linear innovation model, which can lead us to sustainable development and coevolution of knowledge economy, knowledge society, and knowledge democracy. In this paper I would like to find an answer to the following research question: how synchronous are sustainable and inclusive growth goals in theory and in practice with examining how these concepts accrue in international policy papers? To see appearance, I analyse how sustainable and inclusive growth appear in both. First, I analyse how theory describes these issues, and collect group of key words and phrases, then I compare it with six relevant policy papers of the UN and the OECD with content analysis. According to my hypothesis, there is a tendency to follow the new scientific theories and in high level of governance there is no real implementation gap, which can also mean that dealing with sustainable and inclusive growth is not just hype – at least not at the international level.