Content
June 2008, Volume 17, Issue 3
- 467-484 Technological paradigms: past, present and future
by Nick von Tunzelmann & Franco Malerba & Paul Nightingale & Stan Metcalfe - 485-497 Factors affecting the power of technological paradigms
by Richard R. Nelson - 499-506 The Italian connection: the origins of Giovanni Dosi's thinking and a note on some lost, or never written, manuscripts
by Luigi Marengo & Luigi Orsenigo - 507-512 Dosi's technological paradigms and trajectories: insights for economics and management
by David J. Teece - 513-531 Scaling heuristics shape technology! Should economic theory take notice?
by Sidney G. Winter - 533-583 Meta-paradigm change and the theory of the firm
by Paul Nightingale - 585-596 Reply to Dew's (2007) commentary: “Pre-adaptation, exaptation and technology speciation: a comment on Cattani (2006)”
by Gino Cattani
April 2008, Volume 17, Issue 2
- 197-231 Vertical integration and disintegration of computer firms: a history-friendly model of the coevolution of the computer and semiconductor industries
by Franco Malerba & Richard Nelson & Luigi Orsenigo & Sidney Winter - 233-265 Institutional reform and technological practice: the case of electricity
by Rolf W. Künneke - 267-300 The rise and fall of global network alliances
by Svein Ulset - 301-333 How valuable is a piece of the spectrum? Determination of value in external resource acquisition
by Shahzad Ansari & Kamal Munir - 335-392 Technological capabilities and late shakeouts: industrial dynamics in the advanced gas turbine industry, 1987-2002
by Anna Bergek & Fredrik Tell & Christian Berggren & Jim Watson
February 2008, Volume 17, Issue 1
- 1-27 Understanding an emergent diversity of corporate governance and organizational architecture: an essentiality-based analysis -super-1
by Masahiko Aoki & Gregory Jackson - 29-64 ICT, skills, and organizational change: evidence from Italian manufacturing firms
by Paola Giuri & Salvatore Torrisi & Natalia Zinovyeva - 65-108 Modeling the co-evolution of national industries and institutions
by Francisco Fatas-Villafranca & Julio Sanchez-Choliz & Gloria Jarne - 109-154 Financial market reactions following technological discontinuities: a non-event study in two industries
by Mary J. Benner - 155-195 Where do transactions come from? Modularity, transactions, and the boundaries of firms
by Carliss Y. Baldwin
December 2007, Volume 16, Issue 6
- 983-1035 The US stock market and the governance of innovative enterprise
by William Lazonick - 1037-1067 “High performance” work practices, decentralization, and profitability: evidence from panel data -super-†
by Massimo G. Colombo & Marco Delmastro & Larissa Rabbiosi - 1069-1103 A structural decomposition analysis of technological opportunity, corporate survival, and leadership
by Felicia Fai - 1105-1145 Technological regimes and sectoral differences in productivity growth
by Fulvio Castellacci - 1147-1173 Business services outsourcing by manufacturing firms
by Fernando Merino & Diego Rodríguez Rodríguez - 1175-1210 How Europe's economies learn: a comparison of work organization and innovation mode for the EU-15
by Anthony Arundel & Edward Lorenz & Bengt-Åke Lundvall & Antoine Valeyre
October 2007, Volume 16, Issue 5
- 793-821 What distinguishes a serial entrepreneur?
by Ari Hyytinen & Pekka Ilmakunnas - 823-849 The “codification debate” revisited: a conceptual framework to analyze the role of tacit knowledge in economics
by Margherita Balconi & Andrea Pozzali & Riccardo Viale - 851-873 Knowledge and venture funding: complementarities and financial contracts
by Dario Peirone - 875-911 Technology and institutions in changing specialization: chemicals and motor vehicles in the United States, United Kingdom, and Germany
by Andrew Tylecote & Giovanna Vertova - 913-943 Penguin in a new suit: a tale of how de novo entrants emerged to harness free and open source software communities
by Linus Dahlander - 945-975 ‘Exploration and exploitation in product innovation’
by Henrich R. Greve - 977-981 Alfred D. Chandler Review
by Robert F. Freeland
August 2007, Volume 16, Issue 4
- 489-504 The rise of entrepreneurial activity at universities: organizational and societal implications
by Donald S. Siegel & Mike Wright & Andy Lockett - 505-534 University patenting and the pace of industrial innovation
by Kira R. Fabrizio - 535-567 Technology transfer offices as institutional entrepreneurs: the case of Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation and human embryonic stem cells
by Sanjay Jain & Gerard George - 569-608 Knowledge conversion capability and the performance of corporate and university spin-offs
by Shaker A. Zahra & Els Van de Velde & Bárbara Larrañeta - 609-640 Academic spin-offs, formal technology transfer and capital raising
by Bart Clarysse & Mike Wright & Andy Lockett & Philippe Mustar & Mirjam Knockaert - 641-655 An empirical analysis of the propensity of academics to engage in informal university technology transfer
by Albert N. Link & Donald S. Siegel & Barry Bozeman - 657-689 Buying science and selling science: gender differences in the market for commercial science
by Fiona Murray & Leigh Graham - 691-791 University entrepreneurship: a taxonomy of the literature
by Frank T. Rothaermel & Shanti D. Agung & Lin Jiang
June 2007, Volume 16, Issue 3
- 317-346 Organizational capabilities and technology acquisition: why firms know less than they buy
by Stephen Flowers - 347-369 Firm dynamics in manufacturing and services: a broken mirror?
by Francesca Lotti - 371-394 Strategic management as distributed practical wisdom (phronesis)
by Ikujiro Nonaka & Ryoko Toyama - 395-426 The diffusion of workplace voice and high-commitment human resource management practices in Britain, 1984–1998
by Alex Bryson & Rafael Gomez & Tobias Kretschmer & Paul Willman - 427-454 Business groups and internal capital markets: the recovery of the Mexican economy in the aftermath of the 1995 crisis
by Gonzalo Castañeda - 455-488 Entrepreneurship and the process of firms’ entry, survival and growth
by Enrico Santarelli & Marco Vivarelli
April 2007, Volume 16, Issue 2
- 161-182 Employee layoff under different modes of restructuring: exit, downsizing or relocation
by Kristien Coucke & Enrico Pennings & Leo Sleuwaegen - 183-211 The all-steel body as a cornerstone to the foundations of the mass production car industry
by Paul Nieuwenhuis & Peter Wells - 213-238 The spatial evolution of the British automobile industry: Does location matter?
by Ron A. Boschma & Rik Wenting - 239-267 Design complexity, vertical disintegration and knowledge organization in the semiconductor industry
by Ludovic Dibiaggio - 269-292 Learning, product innovation, and firm heterogeneity in developing countries; Evidence from Tanzania
by Micheline Goedhuys - 293-315 Horizontal innovation networks—by and for users
by Eric von Hippel
February 2007, Volume 16, Issue 1
- 1-18 What is the American model really about?
by James K. Galbraith - 19-50 The role of affect in creative projects and exploratory search
by Paul S. Adler & David Obstfeld - 51-88 Creating knowledge: the power and logic of articulation
by Lars Håkanson - 89-130 Desperately seeking spillovers? Increasing returns, industrial organization and the location of new entrants in geographic and technological space
by Barak S. Aharonson & Joel A. C. Baum & Maryann P. Feldman - 131-154 Economic reforms and the competitive environment of firms
by Rogelio Oliva & Fernando F. Suarez - 155-160 Pre-adaptation, exaptation and technology speciation: a comment on Cattani (2006)
by Nicholas Dew
December 2006, Volume 15, Issue 6
- 891-901 Information, appropriability, and the generation of innovative knowledge four decades after Arrow and Nelson: an introduction
by Giovanni Dosi & Franco Malerba & Giovanni B. Ramello & Francesco Silva - 903-917 Reflections on "The Simple Economics of Basic Scientific Research": looking back and looking forward
by Richard R. Nelson - 919-935 Information and intellectual property: the global challenges
by Rishab Ghosh & Luc Soete - 937-963 Appropriating signs and meaning: the elusive economics of trademark
by Giovanni B. Ramello & Francesco Silva - 965-980 Copyright term extension and orphan works
by Hal R. Varian - 981-993 Copyright defection
by Margaret Jane Radin - 995-1011 Copyright protection standards and authors' time allocation
by Richard Watt & Ruth Towse - 1013-1031 Patents and data-sharing in public science
by Rebecca S. Eisenberg - 1033-1062 TRIPS and the international public health controversies: issues and challenges
by Benjamin Coriat & Fabienne Orsi & Cristina d'Almeida
October 2006, Volume 15, Issue 5
- 755-784 Organizational identities and the hazard of change
by Michael T. Hannan & James N. Baron & Greta Hsu & Ozgecan Koçak - 785-810 Incommensurate technological paradigms? Quarreling in the RFID industry
by Nicholas Dew - 811-846 Changing sources of competitive advantage: cognition and path dependence in the Finnish retail industry 1945--1995
by Juha-Antti Lamberg & Henrikki Tikkanen - 847-875 Gibrat's Law and diversification
by Giulio Bottazzi & Angelo Secchi - 877-890 On the Marshall--Jacobs controversy: it takes two to tango
by Gerben van der Panne & Cees van Beers
August 2006, Volume 15, Issue 4
- 595-623 Global integration ≠ global concentration
by Pankaj Ghemawat & Fariborz Ghadar - 625-652 Firm knowledge and market value in biotechnology
by Lionel Nesta & Pier-Paolo Saviotti - 653-682 Investigating the sources of process innovation among UK manufacturing firms
by Toke Reichstein & Ammon Salter - 683-714 Corporate restructuring and labor productivity growth
by Katariina Hakkala - 715-753 Linking the technological regime to the technological catch-up: analyzing Korea and Taiwan using the US patent data
by Kyoo-Ho Park & Keun Lee
June 2006, Volume 15, Issue 3
- 417-465 Plant turnover and productivity growth in Canadian manufacturing
by John R. Baldwin & Wulong Gu - 467-496 Evaluative schemas and the attention of critics in the US film industry
by Greta Hsu - 497-529 Transaction cost economics, resource dependence theory, and customer--supplier relationships
by Robert C. Fink & Linda F. Edelman & Kenneth J. Hatten & William L. James - 531-547 Influence of industry R&D intensity on corporate product diversification: interaction effect of free cash flow
by Jose I. Galan & Maria J. Sanchez - 549-577 The changing face and strategies of big business in South Africa: more than a decade of political democracy
by Neo Chabane & Simon Roberts & Andrea Goldstein - 579-593 Entrepreneurship and the welfare state: a reply
by Magnus Henrekson
April 2006, Volume 15, Issue 2
- 221-250 Why tense, unstable, and diverse relations are inherent in co-designing with suppliers: an aerospace case study
by Alan O'Sullivan - 251-283 How organizational structures in science shape spin-off firms: the biochemistry departments of Berkeley, Stanford, and UCSF and the birth of the biotech industry
by Simcha Jong - 285-318 Technological pre-adaptation, speciation, and emergence of new technologies: how Corning invented and developed fiber optics
by Gino Cattani - 319-352 Small worlds evolving: governance reforms, privatizations, and ownership networks in Italy
by Raffaele Corrado & Maurizio Zollo - 353-371 Schumpeter, Winter, and the sources of novelty
by Markus C. Becker & Thorbjørn Knudsen & James G. March - 373-380 Neo-Schumpeterian and other theories of the firm: a comment and personal retrospective
by Roy Radner - 381-386 What the Folk Theorem doesn't tell us
by Robert Gibbons - 387-390 What's different is routine
by Michael D. Cohen - 391-394 The Neo-Schumpeterian theory of the firm and the strategy field
by Daniel Levinthal - 395-416 Understanding complex organization: the role of know-how, internal structure, and human behavior in the evolution of capabilities
by Mie Augier & David J. Teece
February 2006, Volume 15, Issue 1
- 1-39 Do liquidity constraints matter in explaining firm size and growth? Some evidence from the Italian manufacturing industry
by Giorgio Fagiolo & Alessandra Luzzi - 41-75 Transfer learning in ongoing and newly acquired components of multiunit chains: US nursing homes, 1991--1997
by Jane Banaszak-Holl & Will Mitchell & Joel A. C. Baum & Whitney B. Berta - 77-99 Project-based firms: new organizational form or variations on a theme?
by Richard Whitley - 101-122 Labor and product market reforms: questioning policy complementarity
by Bruno Amable & Donatella Gatti - 123-123 Introduction to Sidney G. Winter Special Section
by Mie Augier & Giovanni Dosi & Daniel Levinthal - 125-141 Toward a neo-Schumpeterian theory of the firm
by Sidney G. Winter - 143-144 Winter on Schumpeter on the firm: some issues of intertemporal continuity
by Kenneth J. Arrow - 145-149 Commentary on Sidney Winter's "Toward a neo-Schumpeterian theory of the firm"
by Richard R. Nelson - 151-171 The architecture and design of organizational capabilities
by Michael G. Jacobides - 173-202 Technologies as problem-solving procedures and technologies as input--output relations: some perspectives on the theory of production
by Giovanni Dosi & Marco Grazzi - 203-207 Some notes on entrepreneurship and welfare state
by James K. Galbraith - 207-213 The entrepreneurial house has many mansions
by Ronald Dore - 214-219 Response to comments in special notes and comments section, ICC 14:6 (2006)
by Ashish Arora & Robert Merges
December 2005, Volume 14, Issue 6
- 897-940 Changing economic environments, evolving diversification strategies, and differing financial performance: Japan's largest textile firms, 1970--2001
by Asli M. Colpan & Takashi Hikino - 941-991 The seven main "stylized facts" of the Mexican economy since trade liberalization and NAFTA
by José Gabriel Palma - 993-1016 Modes of labor flexibility at firm level: Are there any implications for performance and innovation? Evidence for the Swiss economy
by Spyros Arvanitis - 1017-1041 Environmental change and organizational transformation
by Fernando F. Suarez & Rogelio Oliva - 1043-1074 Heterogeneous preferences and new innovation cycles in mature industries: the amateur camera industry 1955--1974
by Paul Windrum - 1075-1108 Patterns of technological competence accumulation: a proposition for empirical measurement
by Mette Praest Knudsen - 1109-1143 Systems integration: a core capability of the modern corporation
by Michael Hobday & Andrew Davies & Andrea Prencipe - 1145-1166 Firm size and firm growth rate distributions--The case of Denmark
by Toke Reichstein & Morten Berg Jensen - 1167-1192 A matter of life and death: innovation and firm survival
by Elena Cefis & Orietta Marsili - 1195-1204 Property rights, firm boundaries, and the republic of science--A note on Ashish Arora and Robert Merges
by Giovanni B. Ramello - 1205-1221 Are "strong patents" beneficial to innovative activities? Lessons from the genetic testing for breast cancer controversies
by Fabienne Orsi & Benjamin Coriat - 1223-1233 Patents and the division of innovative labor
by Alfonso Gambardella - 1235-1236 Argument, methodology, and fashion: reactions to a paper by Arora and Merges
by Richard R. Nelson - 1237-1240 Technological know-how, property rights, and enterprise boundaries: the contribution of Arora and Merges
by David J. Teece
October 2005, Volume 14, Issue 5
- 705-744 Cartel contract duration: empirical evidence from inter-war international cartels
by Valerie Y. Suslow - 745-773 Diffusion of general-purpose technologies: understanding patterns in the electrification of US Manufacturing 1880--1930
by Brent Goldfarb - 775-791 Applying organizational routines in understanding organizational change
by Markus C. Becker & Nathalie Lazaric & Richard R. Nelson & Sidney G. Winter - 793-815 Organizational routines as a unit of analysis
by Brian T. Pentland & Martha S. Feldman - 817-846 A framework for applying organizational routines in empirical research: linking antecedents, characteristics and performance outcomes of recurrent interaction patterns
by Markus C. Becker - 847-871 The void at the heart of rules: routines in the context of rule-following. The case of the Paris Metro Workshop
by Bénédicte Reynaud - 873-896 Routinization and memorization of tasks in a workshop: the case of the introduction of ISO norms
by Nathalie Lazaric & Blandine Denis
August 2005, Volume 14, Issue 4
- 543-578 Ernst Abbe's scientific management: theoretical insights from a nineteenth-century dynamic capabilities approach
by Guido Buenstorf & Johann Peter Murmann - 579-616 Organizing venture capital: the rise and demise of American Research & Development Corporation, 1946--1973
by David H. Hsu & Martin Kenney - 617-638 Relative size and firm growth in the global computer industry
by Matthew S. Bothner - 639-650 Uncertainty and the adoption of complementary technologies
by Margaret H. Smith - 651-677 CLUSTER formation, institutions and learning: the emergence of clusters and development in Chile
by Paola Perez-Aleman - 679-703 Globalization and upgrading: what can (and cannot) be learnt from international trade statistics in the wood furniture sector?
by Raphael Kaplinsky & Jeff Readman
June 2005, Volume 14, Issue 3
- 365-391 Comparative analysis of firm demographics and survival: evidence from micro-level sources in OECD countries
by Eric Bartelsman & Stefano Scarpetta & Fabiano Schivardi - 393-418 The Indian software industry and its evolving service capability
by Suma S. Athreye - 419-436 The theory of the knowledge-creating firm: subjectivity, objectivity and synthesis
by Ikujiro Nonaka & Ryoko Toyama - 437-467 Entrepreneurship: a weak link in the welfare state?
by Magnus Henrekson - 469-500 Variety and the evolution of refinery processing
by Phuong Nguyen & Pier-Paolo Saviotti & Michel Trommetter & Bernard Bourgeois - 501-542 Dynamic capabilities and sustained innovation: strategic control and financial commitment at Rolls-Royce plc
by William Lazonick & Andrea Prencipe
April 2005, Volume 14, Issue 2
- 191-224 Using acquisitions to access multinational diversity: thinking beyond the domestic versus cross-border M&A comparison
by Jaideep Anand & Laurence Capron & Will Mitchell - 225-249 ICT adoption in Italian manufacturing: firm-level evidence
by Silvia Fabiani & Fabiano Schivardi & Sandro Trento - 251-278 Science-driven vs. market-pioneering high tech: comparative German technology sectors in the late nineteenth and late twentieth centuries
by Mark Lehrer - 279-305 Academic research, technological specialization and the innovation performance in European regions: an empirical analysis in the wireless sector
by Mario Calderini & Giuseppe Scellato - 307-342 Integrative capability and technology adoption: evidence from oil firms
by Jaana Woiceshyn & Urs Daellenbach - 343-363 The agglomeration economies associated with information technology activities: an empirical study of the US economy
by Christian Le Bas & Frédéric Miribel
February 2005, Volume 14, Issue 1
- 1-26 From CoPS to mass production? Capabilities and innovation in power generation equipment manufacturing
by Thomas Magnusson & Fredrik Tell & Jim Watson - 27-60 Clusters and intercluster spillovers: their influence on the growth and survival of Canadian information technology firms
by Steven Globerman & Daniel Shapiro & Aidan Vining - 61-91 Privatization and economic returns to R & D investments
by Federico Munari & Raffaele Oriani - 93-118 Cacophony or harmony? Multivocal logics and technology licensing by the Stanford University Department of Music
by Andrew J. Nelson - 119-151 Learning to be capable: patenting and licensing at the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation 1925--2002
by Gerard George - 153-187 Development, flexibility and R & D performance in the Taiwanese IT industry: capability creation and the effects of state--industry coevolution
by Dan Breznitz
December 2004, Volume 13, Issue 6
- 851-854 Introduction to the special issue in honor of Oliver E. Williamson
by Scott E. Masten - 855-866 Incentive intensity, forbearance law and the governance of transactions
by Tian Zhu - 867-882 Determinants of organizational form: transaction costs and institutions in the European trucking industry
by Benito Arruñada & Manuel González-Díaz & Alberto Fernández - 883-900 When do firms hire lobbyists? The organization of lobbying at the Federal Communications Commission
by John M. de Figueiredo & James J. Kim - 901-915 Explicating political hazards and safeguards: a transaction cost politics approach
by Witold J. Henisz & Bennet A. Zelner - 917-929 Problems with contracting out government services: lessons from orderly services at SCGH
by Anthony E. Boardman & Erica Susan Hewitt - 931-951 Contractual hazards and long-term contracting: a TCE view from the petroleum industry
by Edward F. Sherry & David J. Teece - 953-966 Transaction-level determinants of transfer-pricing policy: evidence from the high-technology sector
by Howard A. Shelanski - 967-981 An organizational architecture of T-form: Silicon Valley clustering and its institutional coherence
by Masahiko Aoki
October 2004, Volume 13, Issue 5
- 679-699 Why and how innovations get adopted: a tale of four models
by Richard R Nelson & Alexander Peterhansl & Bhaven Sampat - 701-725 A unified theory of market partitioning: an integration of resource-partitioning and sunk cost theories
by Christophe Boone & Arjen van Witteloostuijn - 727-756 Moving base into high-value integrated solutions: a value stream approach
by Andrew Davies - 757-787 Corporate diversification, coherence and economic performance
by Lucia Piscitello - 789-814 The German connection: shifting hegemony in the political economy of the South African automotive industry
by Justin Barnes & Mike Morris - 815-849 Transforming the energy sector: the evolution of technological systems in renewable energy technology
by Staffan Jacobsson & Anna Bergek
August 2004, Volume 13, Issue 4
- 571-589 Understanding the emergence of 'open science' institutions: functionalist economics in historical context
by Paul A. David - 591-618 Are good managers required for a separation of ownership and control?
by Brian R. Cheffins - 619-642 Competitiveness and production networks: the case of the Argentine automotive sector
by Facundo Albornoz & Gabriel Yoguel - 643-678 Organizational routines: a review of the literature
by Markus C. Becker
June 2004, Volume 13, Issue 3
- 451-475 Specialized supply firms, property rights and firm boundaries
by Ashish Arora & Robert P. Merges - 477-503 The impact of TQM institutionalization on transactions cost calculations in customer--supplier relationships
by Kimberly A. Bates & David G. Hollingworth - 505-529 Exploring the capital goods economy: complex product systems in the UK
by Virginia Acha & Andrew Davies & Michael Hobday & Ammon Salter - 531-539 Introduction to 'Technological infrastructure and international competitiveness' by Christopher Freeman
by Bengt-Ake Lundvall - 541-569 Technological infrastructure and international competitiveness
by C. Freeman
April 2004, Volume 13, Issue 2
- 281-308 Supplier development at Honda, Nissan and Toyota: comparative case studies of organizational capability enhancement
by Mari Sako - 309-333 In search of the Èlite: revising a model of adaptive emulation with evidence from benchmarking team
by David Strang & Mary C. Still - 335-367 Flexible practices for mass production goals: economic governance in the Indian automobile industry
by Anthony P. D'Costa - 369-400 Tools of the trade: the socio-technology of arbitrage in a Wall Street trading room
by Daniel Beunza & David Stark - 401-418 Opportunism is not the only reason why firms exist: why an explanatory emphasis on opportunism may mislead management strategy
by Geoffrey M. Hodgson - 419-450 The early development of the steam engine: an evolutionary interpretation using complexity theory
by Koen Frenken & Alessandro Nuvolari
February 2004, Volume 13, Issue 1
- 1-1 Organizational ecology: an introduction
by Glenn R. Carroll & William P. Barnett - 3-32 Employing identities in organizational ecology
by James N. Baron - 33-59 An ecology of ideology: theory and evidence from four populations
by Tal Simons & Paul Ingram - 61-89 For whom the bell tolls: ecological perspectives on industrial decline and resurgence
by Martin Ruef - 91-116 Hedonic and transcendent conceptions of value
by Joel M. Podolny & Marya Hill-Popper - 117-148 Size, differentiation and the performance of Dutch daily newspapers
by Christophe Boone & Glenn R. Carroll & Arjen van Witteloostuijn - 149-170 Recruitment-based competition between industries: a community ecology
by Jesper B. S¯rensen - 171-212 Shrewd, crude or simply deluded? Comovement and the internet stock phenomenon
by Ezra W. Zuckerman & Hayagreeva Rao - 213-242 The evolution of inertia
by Michael T. Hannan & L·szlÛ PÛlos & Glenn R. Carroll - 243-261 Models of growth in organizational ecology: a simulation assessment
by J. Richard Harrison - 263-280 A Blau space primer: prolegomenon to an ecology of affiliation
by Miller McPherson
December 2003, Volume 12, Issue 6
- 1125-1155 Analysing distributed processes of provision and innovation
by Rod Coombs & Mark Harvey & Bruce S. Tether - 1157-1193 Strategizing by firms in the presence of markets for resources
by John A. Mathews - 1195-1221 Innovation, technological regimes and organizational selection in industry evolution: a 'history friendly model' of the DRAM industry
by Chang-Wook Kim & Keun Lee - 1223-1251 Determinants of governance structure in alliances: the role of strategic, task and partner uncertainties
by Tiziana Casciaro - 1253-1278 Firm-level knowledge accumulation and regional dynamics
by Marjolein C. J. Caniels & Henny A. Romijn - 1279-1301 Festina lente: learning and inertia among Italian automobile producers, 1896--1981
by Tai-Young Kim & Stanislav D. Dobrev & Luca Solari
October 2003, Volume 12, Issue 5
- 963-1034 The stock market and innovative capability in the New Economy: the optical networking industry
by Marie Carpenter & William Lazonick & Mary O'Sullivan - 1035-1050 Sharing intellectual property rights--an exploratory study of joint patenting amongst companies
by John Hagedoorn