TOC: Res Policy
Introduction
Research Policy, 45(5)
Uncovering the reciprocal complementarity between product and process innovation
–Dusana Hullova, Paul Trott, Christopher Don Simms [] []
More labour market flexibility for more innovation? Evidence from employer–employee linked micro data
–Eva Wachsen, Knut Blind [] []
Interdependences in the intrafirm diffusion of technological innovations: Confronting the rational and social accounts of diffusion
–Lucio Fuentelsaz, Jaime Gómez, Sergio Palomas [] []
Growing fast or slow?: Understanding the variety of paths and the speed of early growth of entrepreneurial science-based firms
–Marcela Miozzo, Lori DiVito [] []
Does sector-specific experience matter? The case of European higher education ministers
–Julien Jacqmin, Mathieu Lefebvre [] []
Who becomes a tenured professor, and why? Panel data evidence from German sociology, 1980–2013
–Mark Lutter, Martin Schröder [] []
How the founders’ general and specific human capital drives export activities of start-ups
–Tobias Stucki [] []
Knowledge integration using product R&D outsourcing in biotechnology
–Dzidziso Samuel Kamuriwo, Charles Baden-Fuller [] []
Do green jobs differ from non-green jobs in terms of skills and human capital?
–Davide Consoli, Giovanni Marin, Alberto Marzucchi, Francesco Vona [] []
The two faces of inventions: The relationship between recombination and impact in pharmaceutical biotechnology
–S. Keijl, V.A. Gilsing, J. Knoben, G. Duysters [] []
Why it pays off to pay us well: The impact of basic research on economic growth and welfare
–Klaus Prettner, Katharina Werner [] []
What do patent-based measures tell us about product commercialization? Evidence from the pharmaceutical industry
–Stefan Wagner, Simon Wakeman [] []
Where do spinouts come from? The role of technology relatedness and institutional context
–Sepideh Yeganegi, André O. Laplume, Parshotam Dass, Cam-Loi Huynh [] []
