Research Policy
1971 - 2025
Current editor(s): M. Bell, B. Martin, W.E. Steinmueller, A. Arora, M. Callon, M. Kenney, S. Kuhlmann, Keun Lee and F. Murray From Elsevier Bibliographic data for series maintained by Catherine Liu (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 48, issue S, 2019
- Networks of innovation: the sociotechnical assemblage of tabletop computing

- Mohammad Hossein Jarrahi and Steve Sawyer
- Demand-pull innovation in science: Empirical evidence from a research university’s suppliers

- Stefano Bianchini, Patrick Llerena and Sofia Patsali
Volume 48, issue 10, 2019
- The co-evolution of policy mixes and socio-technical systems: Towards a conceptual framework of policy mix feedback in sustainability transitions

- Duncan L. Edmondson, Florian Kern and Karoline S. Rogge
- Measuring the temporal dynamics of policy mixes – An empirical analysis of renewable energy policy mixes’ balance and design features in nine countries

- Tobias S. Schmidt and Sebastian Sewerin
- Delineating policy mixes: Contrasting top-down and bottom-up approaches to the case of energy-storage policy in California

- Jan Ossenbrink, Sveinbjoern Finnsson, Catharina R. Bening and Volker H. Hoffmann
- Policy-mix evaluation: Governance challenges from new place-based innovation policies

- Edurne Magro and James Wilson
- Mapping the mix: Linking instruments, settings and target groups in the study of policy mixes

- Céline Mavrot, Susanne Hadorn and Fritz Sager
- Lost in translation: How legacy limits the OECD in promoting new policy mixes for sustainability transitions

- Gijs Diercks
- Policies, actors and sustainability transition pathways: A study of the EU’s energy policy mix

- Marie Byskov Lindberg, Jochen Markard and Allan Dahl Andersen
- The acceptance of instruments in instrument mix situations: Citizens’ perspective on Swiss energy transition

- Karin Ingold, Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen and Lorenz Kammermann
- The verticality of policy mixes for sustainability transitions: A case study of solar water heating in China

- Ping Huang
- Policy mixes for sustainability transitions: New approaches and insights through bridging innovation and policy studies

- Florian Kern, Karoline S. Rogge and Michael Howlett
Volume 48, issue 9, 2019
- The relationship between interdisciplinarity and distinct modes of university-industry interaction pp. -

- D’Este, Pablo, Oscar Llopis, Francesco Rentocchini and Alfredo Yegros
- On the use of blockchain-based mechanisms to tackle academic misconduct pp. -

- Vijay Mohan
- How do field-specific research practices affect mobility decisions of early career researchers? pp. -

- Grit Laudel and Jana Bielick
- Reap what you sow: Agricultural technology, urbanization and structural change pp. -

- Danny McGowan and Chrysovalantis Vasilakis
- R&D Subsidies as Dual Signals in Technological Collaborations pp. -

- Mattia Bianchi, Samuele Murtinu and Vittoria G. Scalera
- Research addressing emerging technological ideas has greater scientific impact pp. -

- Seokbeom Kwon, Xiaoyu Liu, Alan L. Porter and Jan Youtie
- The impact of international patent systems: Evidence from accession to the European Patent Convention pp. -

- Bronwyn Hall and Christian Helmers
- Driving innovation: Public policy and human capital pp. -

- Helena Lenihan, Helen McGuirk and Kevin R. Murphy
- Studying transitions: Past, present, and future pp. -

- Mohammadreza Zolfagharian, Bob Walrave, Rob Raven and A. Georges L. Romme
- Trademarks, specialized complementary assets, and the external sourcing of innovation pp. -

- Xiaoshu Bei
- Containing the Not-Invented-Here Syndrome in external knowledge absorption and open innovation: The role of indirect countermeasures pp. -

- Julian Hannen, David Antons, Frank Piller, Torsten Oliver Salge, Tim Coltman and Timothy M. Devinney
- Great expectations: Learning the boundaries of design rights pp. -

- Jussi Heikkilä and Mirva Peltoniemi
- Cheat or perish? A theory of scientific customs pp. -

- Benoît Le Maux, Sarah Necker and Yvon Rocaboy
- Dealing with intellectual property (IP) landmines: Defensive measures to address the problem of IP access pp. -

- Jiyoon Chung, Annika Lorenz and Deepak Somaya
- Political uncertainty and innovation: The relative effects of national leaders’ education levels and regime systems on firm-level patent applications pp. -

- Julio A. Pertuze, Tomas Reyes, Roberto S. Vassolo and Nicolas Olivares
- The effects of offshore production on onshore innovation: Evidence from Japanese multinationals pp. -

- Nobuaki Yamashita and Isamu Yamauchi
- Entrepreneurship policy and the financing of young innovative companies: Evidence from the Italian Startup Act pp. -

- Emanuele Giraudo, Giancarlo Giudici and Luca Grilli
- Reporting errors and biases in published empirical findings: Evidence from innovation research pp. -

- Stephan B. Bruns, Igor Asanov, Rasmus Bode, Melanie Dunger, Christoph Funk, Sherif Hassan, Julia Hauschildt, Dominik Heinisch, Karol Kempa, Johannes König, Johannes Lips, Matthias Verbeck, Eva Wolfschütz and Guido Buenstorf
- Patent claims and patent scope pp. -

- Alan C. Marco, Joshua D. Sarnoff and Charles A.W. deGrazia
- Do low-skilled workers gain from high-tech employment growth? High-technology multipliers, employment and wages in Britain pp. -

- Neil Lee and Stephen Clarke
- The interconnections of academic research and universities’ “third mission”: Evidence from the UK pp. -

- Degl’Innocenti, Marta, Roman Matousek and Nickolaos G. Tzeremes
- The use of material transfer agreements in academia: A threat to open science or a cooperation tool? pp. -

- Véronique Schaeffer
- Socio-cultural framing during the emergence of a technological field: Creating cultural resonance for solar technology pp. -

- Tea Lempiälä, Eeva-Lotta Apajalahti, Teresa Haukkala and Raimo Lovio
- Gender discrepancies in publication productivity of high-performing life science graduate students pp. -

- Alexandra Graddy-Reed, Lauren Lanahan and Jonathan Eyer
- When does crowdsourcing benefit firm stock market performance? pp. -

- Francesco Cappa, Raffaele Oriani, Michele Pinelli and Alfredo De Massis
- Who moves to the methodological edge? Factors that encourage scientists to use unconventional methods pp. -

- Sharon Koppman and Erin Leahey
- Conversations and idea generation: Evidence from a field experiment pp. -

- Sharique Hasan and Rembrand Koning
- The state of innovation system research: What happens beneath the surface? pp. -

- Marija Rakas and Daniel S. Hain
- Intermediation in public procurement of innovation: How Amsterdam’s startup-in-residence programme connects startups to urban challenges pp. -

- Willem van Winden and Luis Carvalho
- Price space and product demography: Evidence from the workstation industry, 1980–1996 pp. -

- Pengfei Wang
- Are engineering graduates ready for R&D jobs in emerging countries? Teaching-focused industry-academia collaboration strategies pp. -

- Dhruba Borah, Khaleel Malik and Silvia Massini
- Bridging analog and digital expertise: Cross-domain collaboration and boundary-spanning tools in the creation of digital innovation pp. -

- Raissa Pershina, Birthe Soppe and Taran Mari Thune
- Testing future societies? Developing a framework for test beds and living labs as instruments of innovation governance pp. -

- Franziska Engels, Alexander Wentland and Sebastian M. Pfotenhauer
- The effect of technological imitation on corporate innovation: Evidence from US patent data pp. -

- Hyun Joong Im and Janghoon Shon
- Workers’ replacements and firms’ innovation dynamics: New evidence from Italian matched longitudinal data pp. -

- Elena Grinza and Francesco Quatraro
- Foreign inventors in Europe and the United States: Diversity and Patent Quality pp. -

- Edoardo Ferrucci and Francesco Lissoni
- The employment impact of product innovations in sub-Saharan Africa: Firm-level evidence pp. -

- Elvis Avenyo, Maty Konte and Pierre Mohnen
- What people learn about how people learn: An analysis of citation behavior and the multidisciplinary flow of knowledge pp. -

- Gregg E.A. Solomon, Jan Youtie, Stephen Carley and Alan L. Porter
- Diversity of backgrounds and ideas: The case of research evaluation in economics pp. -

- Marcella Corsi, D’Ippoliti, Carlo and Giulia Zacchia
- A temporal perspective on repeated ties across university-industry R&D consortia pp. -

- Remco S. Mannak, Marius T.H. Meeus, Jörg Raab and Alexander C. Smit
Volume 48, issue 8, 2019
- The evolution of equity crowdfunding: Insights from co-investments of angels and the crowd pp. -

- Wanxin Wang, Ammara Mahmood, Catarina Sismeiro and Nir Vulkan
- Configuring collective digital-technology usage in dynamic and complex design practices pp. -

- Luuk Verstegen, Wybo Houkes and Isabelle Reymen
- Coherence or flexibility? The paradox of change for developers’ digital innovation trajectory on open platforms pp. -

- Sabine Brunswicker and Aaron Schecter
- Motivations and solution appropriateness in crowdsourcing challenges for innovation pp. -

- Oguz A. Acar
- Investors’ choices between cash and voting rights: Evidence from dual-class equity crowdfunding pp. -

- Douglas Cumming, Michele Meoli and Silvio Vismara
- Is this time different? How digitalization influences job creation and destruction pp. -

- Benjamin Balsmeier and Martin Woerter
- Configurations of platform organizations: Implications for complementor engagement pp. -

- Fatemeh Saadatmand, Rikard Lindgren and Ulrike Schultze
- Social capital and the digital crowd: Involving backers to promote new product innovativeness pp. -

- Nils Eiteneyer, David Bendig and Malte Brettel
- Protecting their digital assets: The use of formal & informal appropriability strategies by App developers pp. -

- Milan Miric, Kevin Boudreau and Lars Bo Jeppesen
- Selecting an open innovation community as an alliance partner: Looking for healthy communities and ecosystems pp. -

- Maha Shaikh and Natalia Levina
- The digital transformation of innovation and entrepreneurship: Progress, challenges and key themes pp. -

- Satish Nambisan, Mike Wright and Maryann Feldman
- Digital technology adoption and knowledge flows within firms: Can the Internet overcome geographic and technological distance? pp. -

- Chris Forman and Nicolas van Zeebroeck
Volume 48, issue 7, 2019
- Patent trading flows of small and large firms pp. 1601-1616

- Nicolás Figueroa and Carlos Serrano
- Gender diversity in the management field: Does it matter for research outcomes? pp. 1617-1632

- Mathias Wullum Nielsen and Love Börjeson
- Which types of knowledge-intensive business services firms collaborate with universities for innovation? pp. 1633-1646

- Hsing-fen Lee and Marcela Miozzo
- Academic breeding grounds: Home department conditions and early career performance of academic researchers pp. 1647-1665

- Anders Broström
- Gender gap in entrepreneurship pp. 1666-1680

- Jorge Guzman and Kacperczyk, Aleksandra (Olenka)
- Gender diversity in senior management, strategic change, and firm performance: Examining the mediating nature of strategic change in high tech firms pp. 1681-1693

- María del Carmen Triana, Orlando C. Richard and Weichieh Su
- Explaining early entry into path-creation technological catch-up in the forestry and pulp industry: Evidence from Brazil pp. 1694-1713

- Paulo N. Figueiredo and Marcela Cohen
- Knowledge to money: Assessing the business performance effects of publicly-funded R&D grants pp. 1714-1737

- Enrico Vanino, Stephen Roper and Bettina Becker
- Suppliers versus start-ups: Where do better innovation ideas come from? pp. 1738-1757

- Felix Homfeldt, Alexandra Rese and Franz Simon
- Crowdsourcing for innovation: How related and unrelated perspectives interact to increase creative performance pp. 1758-1770

- Mark Boons and Daan Stam
- The geography of scientific citations pp. 1771-1780

- Mignon L. Wuestman, Jarno Hoekman and Koen Frenken
- The design of startup accelerators pp. 1781-1797

- Susan Cohen, Daniel C. Fehder, Yael V. Hochberg and Fiona Murray
- Technological cooperation, R&D outsourcing, and innovation performance at the firm level: The role of the regional context pp. 1798-1808

- Damián Tojeiro-Rivero and Rosina Moreno
- Has the Swedish business sector become more entrepreneurial than the US business sector? pp. 1809-1822

- Fredrik Heyman, Pehr-Johan Norbäck, Lars Persson and Fredrik Andersson
- Evaluation in research funding agencies: Are structurally diverse teams biased against? pp. 1823-1840

- Albert Banal-Estañol, Ines Macho-Stadler and David Perez-Castrillo
- Effects of the European Union trademark: Lessons for the harmonization of intellectual property systems pp. 1841-1854

- Benedikt Herz and Malwina Mejer
- Methods to account for citation inflation in research evaluation pp. 1855-1865

- Alexander M. Petersen, Raj K. Pan, Fabio Pammolli and Santo Fortunato
Volume 48, issue 6, 2019
- Reconceptualizing the paradox of openness: How solvers navigate sharing-protecting tensions in crowdsourcing pp. 1323-1339

- J. Nils Foege, Ghita Dragsdahl Lauritzen, Frank Tietze and Torsten Oliver Salge
- Trademarks’ relatedness to product and service innovation: A branding strategy approach pp. 1340-1353

- Meindert Flikkema, Carolina Castaldi, Ard-Pieter de Man and Marcel Seip
- Decision-makers’ underestimation of user innovation pp. 1354-1361

- Philip Bradonjic, Nikolaus Franke and Christian Lüthje
- Scientific novelty and technological impact pp. 1362-1372

- Reinhilde Veugelers and Jian Wang
- The prevalence of publicly stimulated innovations –A comparison of Finland and Sweden, 1970–2013 pp. 1373-1384

- Sara Torregrosa-Hetland, Antti Pelkonen, Juha Oksanen and Astrid Kander
- The economic microgeography of diversity and specialization externalities – firm-level evidence from Swedish cities pp. 1385-1398

- Martin Andersson, Johan Larsson and Joakim Wernberg
- Abandoning innovation activities and performance: The moderating role of openness pp. 1399-1411

- Christos Tsinopoulos, Ji Yan and Carlos M.P. Sousa
- Incumbent actors, guided search paths, and landmark projects in infra-system transitions: Re-thinking Strategic Niche Management with a case study of French tramway diffusion (1971–2016) pp. 1412-1428

- Bruno Turnheim and Frank W. Geels
- Taking leaps of faith: Evaluation criteria and resource commitments for early-stage inventions pp. 1429-1444

- Phillip H. Kim, Reddi Kotha, Sebastian P.L. Fourné and Kristof Coussement
- Invention characteristics and the degree of exclusivity of university licenses: The case of two leading French research universities pp. 1445-1457

- Sıla Öcalan-Özel and Julien Pénin
- Governments as partners: The role of alliances in U.S. cleantech startup innovation pp. 1458-1475

- Claudia Doblinger, Kavita Surana and Laura Diaz Anadon
- Does combining different types of collaboration always benefit firms? Collaboration, complementarity and product innovation in Norway pp. 1476-1486

- Silje Haus-Reve, Rune Fitjar and Andrés Rodríguez-Pose
- Federal funding of doctoral recipients: What can be learned from linked data pp. 1487-1492

- Wan-Ying Chang, Wei Cheng, Julia Lane and Bruce Weinberg
- Persistence of innovation and patterns of firm growth pp. 1493-1512

- Dario Guarascio and Federico Tamagni
- The influence of editorial decisions and the academic network on self-citations and journal impact factors pp. 1513-1522

- Allen Wilhite, Eric A. Fong and Seth Wilhite
- The impact of foreign technological innovation on domestic employment via the industry mix pp. 1523-1533

- Luisa Gagliardi
- Exploration versus exploitation in technology firms: The role of compensation structure for R&D workforce pp. 1534-1549

- Victor Cui, Waverly W. Ding and Yoshio Yanadori
- Glass ceilings in research: Evidence from a national program in Uruguay pp. 1550-1563

- Daniel Bukstein and Nestor Gandelman
- Team diversity as dissimilarity and variety in organizational innovation pp. 1564-1572

- Dong Huo, Kazuyuki Motohashi and Han Gong
- Less than expected—The minor role of foreign firms in upgrading domestic suppliers—The case of Vietnam pp. 1573-1585

- Thi Xuan Thu Nguyen and Javier Revilla Diez
- Greater adaptivity or greater control? Adaptation of IOR portfolios in response to technological change pp. 1586-1600

- Tim de Leeuw, Victor Gilsing and Geert Duysters
Volume 48, issue 5, 2019
- The tentative governance of emerging science and technology—A conceptual introduction pp. 1091-1097

- Stefan Kuhlmann, Peter Stegmaier and Kornelia Konrad
- Tentative governing of fuel cell innovation in a dynamic network of expectations pp. 1098-1112

- Björn Budde and Kornelia Konrad
- Moving from non-interventionism to industrial strategy: The roles of tentative and definitive governance in support of the UK biotech sector pp. 1113-1127

- Michael M. Hopkins, Philippa Crane, Paul Nightingale and Charles Baden-Fuller
- Beyond the limits to governance: New rules of engagement for the tentative governance of the life sciences pp. 1128-1137

- Catherine Lyall and Joyce Tait
- Governing with ambivalence: The tentative origins of socio-technical integration pp. 1138-1149

- Erik Fisher
- The geography of venture capital and entrepreneurial ventures’ demand for external equity pp. 1150-1170

- Massimo G. Colombo, D’Adda, Diego and Anita Quas
- Innovation persistence and employment dynamics pp. 1171-1186

- Stefano Bianchini and Gabriele Pellegrino
- Research joint ventures and technological proximity pp. 1187-1200

- Aranja Müller and Alexandra Zaby
- Mobile phones for financial inclusion: What explains the diffusion of mobile money innovations? pp. 1201-1215

- Addisu Lashitew, Rob van Tulder and Yann Liasse
- Mapping the winds of whole system reconfiguration: Analysing low-carbon transformations across production, distribution and consumption in the UK electricity system (1990–2016) pp. 1216-1231

- Andrew McMeekin, Frank W. Geels and Mike Hodson
- The impacts of government ideology on innovation: What are the main implications? pp. 1232-1247

- Quan-Jing Wang, Gen-Fu Feng, Yin E. Chen, Jun Wen and Chun-Ping Chang
- Does scientist immigration harm US science? An examination of the knowledge spillover channel pp. 1248-1259

- Ajay Agrawal, John McHale and Alexander Oettl
- International research collaboration: Novelty, conventionality, and atypicality in knowledge recombination pp. 1260-1270

- Caroline Wagner, Travis A. Whetsell and Satyam Mukherjee
- Patent policy and American innovation after eBay: An empirical examination pp. 1271-1281

- Filippo Mezzanotti and Timothy Simcoe
- Research collaboration in Large Scale Research Infrastructures: Collaboration types and policy implications pp. 1282-1296

- D’Ippolito, Beatrice and Charles-Clemens Rüling
- Strategic choice in universities: Managerial agency and effective technology transfer pp. 1297-1309

- Sam Horner, Dilani Jayawarna, Benito Giordano and Oswald Jones
- Does learning from prior collaboration help firms to overcome the ‘two-worlds’ paradox in university-business collaboration? pp. 1310-1322

- Nola Hewitt-Dundas, Areti Gkypali and Stephen Roper
Volume 48, issue 4, 2019
- Science, technology and innovation studies at a crossroad: SPRU as case study pp. 849-857

- Luc Soete
- Biotechnology as a new techno-economic paradigm that will help drive the world economy and mitigate climate change pp. 858-868

- Andrew Tylecote
- Transformative innovation policy: Addressing variety in an emerging policy paradigm pp. 880-894

- Gijs Diercks, Henrik Larsen and Fred Steward
- Challenging the “deficit model” of innovation: Framing policy issues under the innovation imperative pp. 895-904

- Sebastian M. Pfotenhauer, Joakim Juhl and Erik Aarden
- Only one way to skin a cat? Heterogeneity and equifinality in European national innovation systems pp. 905-922

- Valeria Cirillo, Arianna Martinelli, Alessandro Nuvolari and Matteo Tranchero
- Innovation in times of financialization: Do future-oriented innovation strategies suffer? Examples from German industry pp. 923-935

- Katrin Hahn
- The evolution of mission-oriented policies: Exploring changing market creating policies in the US and European space sector pp. 936-948

- Douglas K.R. Robinson and Mariana Mazzucato
- The relation between research priorities and societal demands: The case of rice pp. 949-967

- Tommaso Ciarli and Ismael Rafols
- Knowledge-intensive consumer services. Understanding KICS in the innovative global health-care sector pp. 968-982

- Cátia Miriam Costa and Sandro Mendonça
- Transformative innovation in peri-urban Asia pp. 983-992

- Fiona Marshall and Jonathan Dolley
- The technological system of production and innovation: The case of photovoltaic technology in China pp. 993-1015

- Mahmood Shubbak
- Frugal innovation and design changes expanding the cost-performance frontier: A Schumpeterian approach pp. 1016-1029

- Chaisung Lim and Takahiro Fujimoto
- Shaping selection environments for industrial catch-up and sustainability transitions: A systemic perspective on endogenizing windows of opportunity pp. 1030-1047

- Xiao-Shan Yap and Bernhard Truffer
- Innovation policy for system-wide transformation: The case of strategic innovation programmes (SIPs) in Sweden pp. 1048-1061

- Markus Grillitsch, Teis Hansen, Lars Coenen, Johan Miörner and Jerker Moodysson
- Towards a typology of intermediaries in sustainability transitions: A systematic review and a research agenda pp. 1062-1075

- Paula Kivimaa, Wouter Boon, Sampsa Hyysalo and Laurens Klerkx
- Governance for system optimization and system change: The case of urban waste pp. 1076-1090

- Markus M. Bugge, Arne Fevolden and Antje Klitkou
Volume 48, issue 3, 2019
- Intellectual property rights, trade agreements, and international trade pp. 531-545

- Mercedes Campi and Marco Duenas
- Which firms benefit from investments in green energy technologies? – The effect of energy costs pp. 546-555

- Tobias Stucki
- Factors that influence the transition of university postdocs to non-academic scientific careers: An exploratory study pp. 556-570

- Christopher S. Hayter and Marla A. Parker
- To have or to be? The interplay between knowledge structure and market identity in knowledge-based alliance formation pp. 571-583

- Angeloantonio Russo, Clodia Vurro and Rajiv Nag
- “All for One and One for All?” - Knowledge broker roles in managing tensions of internal coopetition: The Ubisoft case pp. 584-600

- Paul Chiambaretto, David Massé and Nicola Mirc
- Commercializing university research in transition economies: Technology transfer offices or direct industrial funding? pp. 601-615

- Maksim Belitski, Anna Aginskaja and Radzivon Marozau
- Human capital and innovation: the importance of the optimal organizational task structure pp. 616-627

- Tiago Fonseca, Pedro de Faria and Francisco Lima
- The workforce of pioneer plants pp. 628-648

- Ricardo Hausmann and Frank Neffke
- The long march to catch-up: A history-friendly model of China’s mobile communications industry pp. 649-664

- Daitian Li, Gianluca Capone and Franco Malerba
- Information ambiguity, patents and the market value of innovative assets pp. 665-675

- Katrin Hussinger and Sebastian Pacher
- Sustainable development of science and scientists: Academic training in life science labs pp. 676-692

- Sotaro Shibayama
- Regional diversification and green employment in US metropolitan areas pp. 693-705

- Nicolò Barbieri and Davide Consoli
- Skilled migration and innovation in European industries pp. 706-718

- Claudio Fassio, Fabio Montobbio and Alessandra Venturini
- Towards a segmentation of science parks: A typology study on science parks in Europe pp. 719-732

- Wei Keat Benny Ng, Rianne Appel-Meulenbroek, Myriam Cloodt and Theo Arentze
- Breakthrough recognition: Bias against novelty and competition for attention pp. 733-747

- Sen Chai and Anoop Menon
- Electricity (de)regulation and innovation pp. 748-758

- Marianna Marino, Pierpaolo Parrotta and Giacomo Valletta
- Citizens of somewhere: Examining the geography of foreign and native-born academics’ engagement with external actors pp. 759-774

- Cornelia Lawson, Ammon Salter, Alan Hughes and Michael Kitson
- Opening up the feasibility of sustainability transitions pathways (STPs): Representations, potentials, and conditions pp. 775-788

- Bruno Turnheim and Björn Nykvist
- Advancing innovation in the public sector: Aligning innovation measurement with policy goals pp. 789-798

- Anthony Arundel, Carter Bloch and Barry Ferguson
- Venture capital investment strategies under financing constraints: Evidence from the 2008 financial crisis pp. 799-812

- Annamaria Conti, Nishant Dass, Francesco Di Lorenzo and Stuart Graham
- Many hands: The effect of the prior inventor-intermediaries relationship on academic licensing pp. 813-829

- Young-Choon Kim, Mooweon Rhee and Reddi Kotha
- The visible hand of cluster policy makers: An analysis of Aerospace Valley (2006-2015) using a place-based network methodology pp. 830-842

- D. Lucena-Piquero and Jérôme Vicente
Volume 48, issue 2, 2019
- Towards a taxonomy of research misconduct: The case of business school research pp. 414-427

- Jeremy Hall and Ben Martin
- Scientific misconduct at an elite medical institute: The role of competing institutional logics and fragmented control pp. 428-443

- Christian Berggren and Solmaz Filiz Karabag
- Pathogenic organization in science: Division of labor and retractions pp. 444-461

- John P. Walsh, You-Na Lee and Li Tang
- A walk on the wild side: ‘Predatory’ journals and information asymmetries in scientific evaluations pp. 462-477

- Manuel Bagues, Mauro Sylos-Labini and Natalia Zinovyeva
- Self-citations as strategic response to the use of metrics for career decisions pp. 478-491

- Marco Seeber, Mattia Cattaneo, Michele Meoli and Paolo Malighetti
- The extent and causes of academic text recycling or ‘self-plagiarism’ pp. 492-502

- Horbach, S.P.J.M.(Serge) and Halffman, W.(Willem)
- Evaluating solutions to the problem of false positives pp. 506-515

- Thomas Gall and Zacharias Maniadis
- Guilt by association: How scientific misconduct harms prior collaborators pp. 516-530

- Katrin Hussinger and Maikel Pellens
Volume 48, issue 1, 2019
- More is not always better: Effects of collaboration breadth and depth on radical and incremental innovation performance at the project level pp. 1-10

- Sebastian Kobarg, Jutta Stumpf-Wollersheim and Isabell M. Welpe
- Product portfolio performance in new foreign markets: The EU trademark dual system pp. 11-21

- Alicia Barroso, Marco S. Giarratana and Martina Pasquini
- Overcoming the “lost before translation” problem: An exploratory study pp. 22-36

- Nabil Amara, Julia Olmos-Peñuela and Ignacio Fernández-de-Lucio
- Persistent heterogeneity of R&D intensities within sectors: Evidence and policy implications pp. 37-50

- Alex Coad
- Modular designs and integrating practices: Managing collaboration through coordination and cooperation pp. 51-61

- Richard Tee, Andrew Davies and Jennifer Whyte
- Replication studies in economics—How many and which papers are chosen for replication, and why? pp. 62-83

- Frank Mueller-Langer, Benedikt Fecher, Dietmar Harhoff and Gert Wagner
- The important thing is not to win, it is to take part: What if scientists benefit from participating in research grant competitions? pp. 84-97

- Charles Ayoubi, Michele Pezzoni and Fabiana Visentin
- Attracting solutions in crowdsourcing contests: The role of knowledge distance, identity disclosure, and seeker status pp. 98-114

- Patrick Pollok, Dirk Lüttgens and Frank T. Piller
- Estimating the causal effect of R&D subsidies in a pan-European program pp. 115-124

- Paul Hünermund and Dirk Czarnitzki
- A technology gap interpretation of growth paths in Asia and Latin America pp. 125-136

- Mario Cimoli, João Basilio Pereima and Gabriel Porcile
- Patent examiner specialization pp. 137-148

- Cesare Righi and Timothy Simcoe
- International research collaboration: An emerging domain of innovation studies? pp. 149-168

- Kaihua Chen, Yi Zhang and Xiaolan Fu
- National health innovation systems: Clustering the OECD countries by innovative output in healthcare using a multi indicator approach pp. 169-179

- Dorian Proksch, Julia Busch-Casler, Marcus Max Haberstroh and Andreas Pinkwart
- Knowledge integration in the shadow of tacit spillovers: Empirical evidence from U.S. R&D labs pp. 180-205

- Roberto Venturini, Marco Ceccagnoli and Nicolas van Zeebroeck
- Institutional complementarities: The origins of experimentation in China’s plug-in electric vehicle industry pp. 206-222

- John P. Helveston, Yanmin Wang, Valerie J. Karplus and Erica R.H. Fuchs
- Same but different? Research and technology organizations, universities and the innovation activities of firms pp. 223-233

- Eleni Giannopoulou, Pierre-Jean Barlatier and Julien Pénin
- Knowledge base combinations and firm growth pp. 234-247

- Markus Grillitsch, Torben Schubert and Martin Srholec
- The heterogeneous skill-base of circular economy employment pp. 248-261

- Martijn Burger, Spyridon Stavropoulos, Shyaam Ramkumar, Joke Dufourmont and Frank Oort
- Paths of technology upgrading in the BRICS economies pp. 262-280

- Iciar Dominguez Lacasa, Bjoern Jindra, Slavo Radosevic and Mahmood Shubbak
- Innovation as a vehicle for improving socially vulnerable groups’ access to basic provisions: A research note on the development of a questionnaire module pp. 281-288

- Petra Andries, Alain Daou and Laura Verheyden
- Does lead userness foster idea implementation and diffusion? A study of internal shopfloor users pp. 289-297

- Tim G. Schweisfurth and Magha P. Dharmawan
- The anatomy of a troll? Patent licensing business models in the light of patent reassignment data pp. 298-311

- Aija Leiponen and Henry Delcamp
- Towards system oriented innovation policy evaluation? Evidence from EU28 member states pp. 312-321

- Susana Borrás and Mart Laatsit
- From new imported inputs to new exported products. Firm-level evidence from Sweden pp. 322-338

- Davide Castellani and Claudio Fassio
- Critical capabilities for effective management of complementarity between product and process innovation: Cases from the food and drink industry pp. 339-354

- Dusana Hullova, Christopher Don Simms, Paul Trott and Pavel Laczko
- The impact of patent protection and financial development on industrial R&D pp. 355-370

- Keith Maskus, Sahar Milani and Rebecca Neumann
- The impact of government-supported participative loans on the growth of entrepreneurial ventures pp. 371-384

- Fabio Bertoni, Jose Martí and Carmelo Reverte
- Country-level technological disparities, market feedback, and scientists’ choice of technologies pp. 385-400

- Byungchae Jin
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