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To help to promote a greater conversation between those interested
in the theoretical explanation of IB activities from various
different backgrounds or starting points, this book offers a
special Collection of JIBS articles which concern the foundations
and the application of the eclectic paradigm.
Finally, after two thousand years of circling the wagons against
its many critics, Martin Luther and Henry VIII being the most
devastating, the Vatican is taken to task internally: by the Pope
himself!
This book provides some new ideas on the conceptualization of a
shift in technological paradigm, and it explores in depth the
relevance of this concept for research on innovation systems. It
examines text-mining software and analyzes patent data as well as
academic and business journals to illustrate the paradigm shift of
newly emerging technologies, such as the all-solid-state battery
and automatic driving for electric vehicles, and surgical robots.
It also explores the critical role of emerging software
technologies by examining US, EU, and Japanese patent statistics.
Highlighting the paradigm shift of technologies since the 1990s and
the geographical dispersion of innovative capabilities, it
identifies essential trends toward new innovation systems as well
as the concentration and dispersion of national and corporate
R&D capabilities that have taken place as a result. In this new
paradigm, the competitiveness of a company is decisively determined
by other innovations in systems and management. Since the 1990s,
when a network economy began to be established and technological
know-how came to be easily transferred across borders, the changing
structure of technological activities has required organizations
with traditional integral and closed architecture models to move
toward open innovation or modular architectures. These changes
involve wider technological areas and cognitive diversity among
international inter-firm and intra-firm R&D networks. This book
is highly recommended not only to academicians but also to business
people seeking an in-depth and up-to-date overview of the paradigm
shift of technologies and new innovation systems.
This comprehensive new collection provides a careful selection of
the major writings to have appeared in the field of foreign direct
investment (FDI) and technological change since 1966. It has been
prepared by one of the leading contributors and pioneers in this
field, and is an area of research that has attracted a steady
growth in interest over the last thirty years. After a new
introduction which critically surveys the literature, the
collection provides a comprehensive coverage that incorporates the
early analysis of FDI and technology; the theoretical foundations
of the analysis of technological change in multinational firms;
theoretical models and empirical studies of technology transfer;
the internationalization of technology creation; technology-based
inter-company alliances; the co-evolution of FDI and technological
development at country level; the geographical localization of the
technological efforts of foreign-owned affiliates and technology
spillovers between firms.
The eclectic paradigm has arguably become the dominant theoretical
basis in the study of FDI, multinational corporations and
internationalisation over the last two decades. The contributions
to this volume evaluate the eclectic paradigm in the global economy
and its validity as a theoretical basis to understand developments
such as economic globalization and the subsequent growth of global
and alliance capitalism.
This authoritative collection reprints the key articles in the
field of the economics of patents. The editor's selection,
contextualised by a comprehensive introduction, examines the
classic literature on the design and evolution of the patent
system, the now well-established body of work on the use of patent
statistics as a measure of invention and technological change, and
the new interest in the analysis of corporate patenting. Volume I
explores the nature of the patent system, the breadth of patent
scope, and the historical foundations of patenting. It goes on to
cover overall macro-trends and sectoral patterns of patenting over
long periods, as well as critical appraisals of the use of patent
statistics. Volume II addresses topics such as firm motivations to
patent, the valuation of patents, and determinants of variations in
the propensity to patent. It concludes with the analysis of
corporate technological profiles, and patterns of knowledge flows,
science-technology relationships and social networks.
Recently, attempts have been made to understand the patterns of corporate technological diversification and their implications on economic and managerial dimensions. This book consolidates these attempts and breaks new ground, providing a systematic analysis of data and case-studies in its analysis of the phenomenon of technological diversification. Subjects discussed include product diversification, economic performance, internationalization, managerial and organisational issues, and strategic alliances. The international range of contributors and case-studies will appeal particularly to those interested in the EU research and policy.
Contents: 1. The eclectic paradigm in the global economy. John Cantwell and Rajneesh Narula 2. The eclectic (OLI) paradigm of international production: Past, present and future. John H. Dunning 3. New Instructional Economics: An organising framework for OLI. Elizabeth Maitland and Stephen Nicholas 4. FDI and endogenous growth: IB perspectives. Terutomo Ozama and Sergio Castello 5. The co-evolutional advantage: Strategic management theory and the eclectic paradigm. Anoop Madhok and Anupama Phene 6. From OLI to OLMA: Incorporating higher levels of environmental and structural complexity into the eclectic paradigm. Stephen Guisinger 7. From a theory to a paradigm: Examining the eclectic paradigm as a framework in international economics 8. Managerial beliefs, market contestability and dominant strategic orientation in the eclectic paradigm. Timothy M. Devinney, David F. Midgley and Sunil Venaik 9. The Micro-Mechanics of foreign operations' performance: an analysis based on the OLI-framework. Gabriel R.G. Benito and Sverre Tomassen 10. The eclectic paradigm and the recognition of finance-specific factors. Lars Oxelheim, Trond Randøy and Arthur Stonehill 11. The challenge of electronic markets for international business theory. John H. Dunning and Cliff Wymbs 12. The recent globalisation of the italian banking sector. An interpretation based on the ecelctic paradigm. Lucia Piscitello 13. OLI:a critical reflection and some conclusions. Lorraine Eden
In globalising economies, particularly those going through a process of economic integration such as those economies within the EU, regions forge an increasing number of linkages with other locations within and across national borders. This is largely carried out by the technological efforts of Multinational Corporations (MNCs). This book explores the regional dimension of Europe in terms of localised technological comparative advantages and the location of innovative activities by MNCs. Using an empirical analysis John Cantwell and Simona Iammarino cover such important themes as: *MNC technological activities and economic wealth *MNCs and the regional systems of innovation in Italy, UK, Germany and France *the geographical hierarchy across European national borders.
Multinational Enterprises, Innovative Strategies and Systems of
Innovation explores the extent to which multinational enterprises
(MNEs) are decentralising the creation of new technological
capabilities to various different countries. The book contends that
technological strategies and innovation activities undertaken by
firms are a critical part of the increasing internationalisation of
economic activity, and that MNEs are the main actors for these
changes. It goes on to explain that MNEs must now effectively
manage new technological assets in order to cope with extensive
changes in the nature of international competition. Experts from a
network of thirteen European countries attempt to promote a better
understanding of tendencies towards a new international dynamic of
technology creation and diffusion. The contributors to the book
then explore the factors determining the process of
decentralisation and the resulting consequences for national
systems of innovation. This thorough and easily accessible analysis
of new trends in the technological strategies of MNEs and their
implications for national systems of innovation will be of enormous
interest to those specialising in the internationalisation of the
economy or the economic analysis of technical change. In addition,
the book will provide an excellent source of background information
for policymakers when drafting new policies, and for corporate
decision-making in the private sector.
The rise of innovative firms in emerging market economies is an
increasingly topical issue. However, the literature has lagged
behind in helping us understand this phenomenon. Addressing this
gap, the book draws on a variety of firm-level experiences across a
range of key countries, sectors, and institutional contexts.
Despite the obvious differences, the book finds a commonality in
these experiences: they have all been influenced by shifts in the
institutional, technological, and policy environment, in particular
by the opening up of emerging market economies over the past three
decades, and the consequent increase in international business
interactions. Across the different countries surveyed in Asia and
Latin America, the book argues that firm level innovation has been
strongly influenced by capabilities that had previously been built
up in a relatively closed environment. However, in the current more
open environment, it is suggested that innovation among firms also
reflects differences in these national historical contexts, as well
as in the different forms of interaction with international
business that have subsequently emerged. This book is a valuable
resource for academics, researchers, and graduate students in
international business and technology management.
This book provides some new ideas on the conceptualization of a
shift in technological paradigm, and it explores in depth the
relevance of this concept for research on innovation systems. It
examines text-mining software and analyzes patent data as well as
academic and business journals to illustrate the paradigm shift of
newly emerging technologies, such as the all-solid-state battery
and automatic driving for electric vehicles, and surgical robots.
It also explores the critical role of emerging software
technologies by examining US, EU, and Japanese patent statistics.
Highlighting the paradigm shift of technologies since the 1990s and
the geographical dispersion of innovative capabilities, it
identifies essential trends toward new innovation systems as well
as the concentration and dispersion of national and corporate
R&D capabilities that have taken place as a result. In this new
paradigm, the competitiveness of a company is decisively determined
by other innovations in systems and management. Since the 1990s,
when a network economy began to be established and technological
know-how came to be easily transferred across borders, the changing
structure of technological activities has required organizations
with traditional integral and closed architecture models to move
toward open innovation or modular architectures. These changes
involve wider technological areas and cognitive diversity among
international inter-firm and intra-firm R&D networks. This book
is highly recommended not only to academicians but also to business
people seeking an in-depth and up-to-date overview of the paradigm
shift of technologies and new innovation systems.
The rise of innovative firms in emerging market economies is an
increasingly topical issue. However, the literature has lagged
behind in helping us understand this phenomenon. Addressing this
gap, the book draws on a variety of firm-level experiences across a
range of key countries, sectors, and institutional contexts.
Despite the obvious differences, the book finds a commonality in
these experiences: they have all been influenced by shifts in the
institutional, technological, and policy environment, in particular
by the opening up of emerging market economies over the past three
decades, and the consequent increase in international business
interactions. Across the different countries surveyed in Asia and
Latin America, the book argues that firm level innovation has been
strongly influenced by capabilities that had previously been built
up in a relatively closed environment. However, in the current more
open environment, it is suggested that innovation among firms also
reflects differences in these national historical contexts, as well
as in the different forms of interaction with international
business that have subsequently emerged. This book is a valuable
resource for academics, researchers, and graduate students in
international business and technology management.
Drawing on almost forty years of leading Australian men and women
in high-stakes combat overseas and tough times at home, Cantwell
cuts to the core of practical leadership and exposes the skills
needed to succeed. This long-overdue book, filled with examples
from hands-on leadership experience, breaks down the barriers to
building trust and achieving world-class results with superiors,
colleagues and team mates in any working environment. It reveals
simple but highly effective leadership techniques that work in the
real world.
"It happens that this book germinated over dinner at my house in
Virginia many years ago. Jack Kiley, a contributor to "Triumph,"
the monthly magazine founded by my husband, Brent Bozell, was our
weekend guest in 1966. Jack had had one of his serial "cognitive
breakthroughs" as he calls them, and sought Brent's advice on doing
a novel about a pope. Here it is: the story of a pope who tries to
rescue the planet from a thermonuclear holocaust. The world is
ready for John Kiley's Peter II."
--Patricia Buckley Bozell, "National Review," February 24, 2004.
Finally, after two thousand years of circling the wagons against
its many critics, Martin Luther and Henry VIII being the most
devastating, the Vatican is taken to task internally: by the Pope
himself!
If you have any interest in the meaning of life, the human spirit,
or life after death, this is a book you must read...
Recently, attempts have been made to understand the patterns of
corporate technological diversification and their implications in
economic and managerial dimensions. This book consolidates these
attempts and breaks new ground by examining the patterns of
technological diversification, and their relationship with
internationalisation, economic performance, and inter-company
alliances. Following an introduction and a survey of product and
technological diversification, the book begins with a statistical
analysis of technological diversification, and its links with
internationalisation and alliances. It continues with a range of
industry and company case studies, and an assessment of historical
evidence. The book provides a systematic analysis of data, case
studies, and other relevant material to understand this phenomenon.
Contributors bring to bear significant experience with large data
sets at the firm level on technological divesification and other
strategic dimensions on which it has an impact. This book will be
essential reading for students and researchers in the fields of
economics, International Business, Business Strategy and Technology
Management.
In globalising economies, particularly those going through a
process of economic integration such as those economies within the
EU, regions forge an increasing number of linkages with other
locations within and across national borders. This is largely
carried out by the technological efforts of Multinational
Corporations (MNCs). This book explores the regional dimension of
Europe in terms of localised technological comparative advantages
and the location of innovative activities by MNCs. Using an
empirical analysis John Cantwell and Simona Iammarino cover such
important themes as: MNC technological activities and economic
wealth MNCs and the regional systems of innovation in Italy, UK,
Germany and France the geographical hierarchy across European
national borders.
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