TOC: Res Policy
Introduction
Research Policy, 37(10)
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Relevant ARCategory: |
Knowledge dynamics out of balance: Knowledge biased, skewed and unmatched
–Wilfred Dolfsma, Cristina Chaminade and Jan Vang [] []
The technology clubs: The distribution of knowledge across nations
–Fulvio Castellacci and Daniele Archibugi [] []
Uneven domestic knowledge bases and the success of foreign firms in the USA
–Helena Barnard [] []
Globalisation of knowledge production and regional innovation policy: Supporting specialized hubs in the Bangalore software industry
–Cristina Chaminade and Jan Vang [] []
Resolving the knowledge paradox: Knowledge-spillover entrepreneurship and economic growth
–David B. Audretsch and Max Keilbach [] []
Currents and sub-currents in innovation flows: Explaining innovativeness using new-product announcements
–Wilfred Dolfsma and Gerben van der Panne [] []
Network embeddedness and the exploration of novel technologies: Technological distance, betweenness centrality and density
–Victor Gilsing, Bart Nooteboom, Wim Vanhaverbeke, Geert Duysters and Ad van den Oord [] []
Growing through copying: The negative consequences of innovation on franchise network growth
–Gabriel Szulanski and Robert J. Jensen [] []
Organizational knowledge creation and the generation of new product ideas: A behavioral approach
–Anja Schulze and Martin Hoegl [] []
Against the odds: Small firms in Australia successfully introducing new technology on construction projects
–Karen Manley [] []
Commercialization strategies of young biotechnology firms: An empirical analysis of the U.S. industry
–Silja Kasch and Michael Dowling [] []
Product innovation and the decision to invest in fixed capital assets: Evidence from an SME survey in six European Union member states
–Dimitris Skuras, Kyriaki Tsegenidi and Kostas Tsekouras [] []
Corporate governance and technological dynamism of Chinese firms in mobile telecommunications: A quantitative study
–Jing Cai and Andrew Tylecote [] []
Do subsidiaries of foreign MNEs invest more in R&D than domestic firms?
–C. Annique Un and Alvaro Cuervo-Cazurra [] []
Measuring the change in R&D efficiency of the Japanese pharmaceutical industry
–Akihiro Hashimoto and Shoko Haneda [] []
Analysing knowledge transfer channels between universities and industry: To what degree do sectors also matter?
–Rudi Bekkers and Isabel Maria Bodas Freitas [] []
Close enough but not too far: Assessing the effects of university–industry research relationships and the rise of academic capitalism
–Rick Welsh, Leland Glenna, William Lacy and Dina Biscotti [] []
University-industry knowledge and technology transfer in Switzerland: What university scientists think about co-operation with private enterprises
–Spyros Arvanitis, Ursina Kubli and Martin Woerter [] []
Engaging the scholar: Three types of academic consulting and their impact on universities and industry
–Markus Perkmann and Kathryn Walsh [] []
Does it matter where patent citations come from? Inventor vs. examiner citations in European patents
–Paola Criscuolo and Bart Verspagen [] []
Research tool patents and free-libre biotechnology: A suggested unified framework
–Julien Pénin and Jean-Pierre Wack [] []
Book Reviews
J. Atkinson-Grosjean, Public Science, Private Interests. Culture and Commerce in Canada’s Networks of Centres of Excellence , University of Toronto Press (2006) 269 pp., ISBN 13: 978-0-8020-8005-9, ISBN 10: 0-8020-8005-7.
–Alma Rocha-Lackiz []
Gregory Tassey, The Technology Imperative , Edward Elgar, Cheltenham, UK (2007) pp. xii + 329, $135.00.
–Irene C. Makar []
J. Whitford, The New Old Economy: Networks Institutions and the Organizational Transformation of American Manufacturing , Oxford University Press Inc., NY, USA (2005) ISBN 978-0-19-928601-0 228 pp., £35.00 Hardback.
–Yari Borbon-Galvez []
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