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Nanotechnology, as shortly described as the study of manipulating
matter on an atomic and molecular scale, is one of the most dynamic
and promising industries, receiving a great deal of attention from
researchers, business leaders, investors, and policymakers around
the world. In Making It to the Forefront, Nesli Aydogan-Duda has
assembled a distinguished group of authors to analyze the
particular challenges and opportunities of nanotechnology emergence
and management in the developing world. In so doing, they address
the issues from several angles, ranging from cultural issues to
capital markets, industrial clusters to government policy and legal
structure. Drawing from in-depth research and case studies in
Turkey, Latin America, India, China, and Iran, and a comparison
with the development of the industry in the United states, the
authors present a cross-cultural approach, with particular emphasis
on the strategic nature of the nanotechnology industry for economic
development, consumer welfare, and homeland security. Among the
topics they consider are the importance of knowledge transfer from
universities to the market and, more generally, the interface
between science and its commercialization-and the institutional
infrastructure that is necessary to maximize the potential of
science and technology. In doing so, the authors provide
unprecedented theoretical and empirical contributions to the study
of nanotechnology, and, more generally, insight into the complex
business, political, and cultural environment that must be
established in order for such an industry to thrive in the context
of a developing country.
Nanotechnology, as shortly described as the study of manipulating
matter on an atomic and molecular scale, is one of the most dynamic
and promising industries, receiving a great deal of attention from
researchers, business leaders, investors, and policymakers around
the world. In Making It to the Forefront, Nesli Aydogan-Duda has
assembled a distinguished group of authors to analyze the
particular challenges and opportunities of nanotechnology emergence
and management in the developing world. In so doing, they address
the issues from several angles, ranging from cultural issues to
capital markets, industrial clusters to government policy and legal
structure. Drawing from in-depth research and case studies in
Turkey, Latin America, India, China, and Iran, and a comparison
with the development of the industry in the United states, the
authors present a cross-cultural approach, with particular emphasis
on the strategic nature of the nanotechnology industry for economic
development, consumer welfare, and homeland security. Among the
topics they consider are the importance of knowledge transfer from
universities to the market and, more generally, the interface
between science and its commercialization-and the institutional
infrastructure that is necessary to maximize the potential of
science and technology. In doing so, the authors provide
unprecedented theoretical and empirical contributions to the study
of nanotechnology, and, more generally, insight into the complex
business, political, and cultural environment that must be
established in order for such an industry to thrive in the context
of a developing country.
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