32 research outputs found
Innovation: A cross-disciplinary perspective: Kjell Gronhaug and Geir Kaufmann, (Norwegian University Press, Oslo, 1988) pp. 529
'Knowledge Management Practices’ and Path Dependency in Innovation
This groundbreaking paper has now been re-printed twice in international reference collections on the management of technology and knowledge:- in
Organizational Learning and Knowledge Management, Three Volumes, Edited by William H Starbuck, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar (2008), The International Library of Critical Writings on Business and Management series; and in
The Management of Technology and Innovation, Two Volumes, Edited by John Storey, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar (2004), Critical Writings in Management, Reference Series
Contribution of new technology-based firms to the strengthening of technological capabilities in intermediate economies
Information Technology, Control and Power: the Centralisation and Decentralisation Debate Revisited
Contribution of new technology-based firms to the strengthening of technological capabilities in intermediate economies
Innovation in pharmaceuticals: Perspectives on the co-ordination, combination and creation of capabilities
Current and future trends in European technological development: New patterns in the funding of R&D
The authors evaluate European Research and Development against a background of unevenly rising R&D gross spending, development in strategic technologies, the dominance of four fields of technological change, technological convergence, and Europe's comparative weakness in R&D faced with Japan and the United States. They are optimistic about total future funding for R&D, although increasing attention will be paid to its efficiency. Most striking however, are the authors' warning signals that basic research is likely to continue to decline in Europe as frontier technological research (in the medium term) and applications-oriented work (even shorter term) become the focus of attention, particularly by corporations. The reasons for this are explored, and in their prescriptions the authors urge European Public Sector R&D to harness a Private Sector R&D trend by directing its efforts towards collaborative applications of technology into "quality of life and environment fields", namely new environmental, health and education markets. It will have competitive advantages as well as life-enhancing effects.