Industrial and Corporate Change
1995 - 2025
Current editor(s): Josef Chytry From Oxford University Press and the Associazione ICC Oxford University Press, Great Clarendon Street, Oxford OX2 6DP, UK. Bibliographic data for series maintained by Oxford University Press (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 20, issue 6, 2011
- Founder backgrounds and the evolution of firm size pp. 1515-1538

- Peter W. Roberts, Steven Klepper and Scott Hayward
- A multilevel analysis of innovation in developing countries * pp. 1539-1569

- Martin Srholec
- Individual scientific collaborations and firm-level innovation pp. 1571-1599

- Paul Almeida, Jan Hohberger and Pedro Parada
- Information technology and the changing workplace in Canada: firm-level evidence pp. 1601-1636

- Saeed Moshiri and Wayne Simpson
- Building innovation systems: an introduction to the special section pp. 1637-1643

- Jorge Niosi
- Learning and catching up in different sectoral systems: evidence from six industries pp. 1645-1675

- Franco Malerba and Richard Nelson
- How venture capital became a component of the US National System of Innovation pp. 1677-1723

- Martin Kenney
- Design of innovation policy through diagnostic analysis: identification of systemic problems (or failures) pp. 1725-1753

- Charles Edquist
- The quality factor in patent systems pp. 1755-1793

- Bruno van Pottelsberghe de la Potterie
- Complexity and path dependence in biotechnology innovation systems pp. 1795-1826

- Jorge Niosi
- Learning from one another? International policy "emulation" and university--industry technology transfer pp. 1827-1853

- David C. Mowery
Volume 20, issue 5, 2011
- How the Chinese government promoted a global automobile industry pp. 1235-1276

- Wan-Wen Chu
- Competence and commitment: employer size and entrepreneurial endurance pp. 1277-1304

- Jesper B. Sørensen and Damon J. Phillips
- Technological regimes and the persistence of first-mover advantages pp. 1305-1333

- Jungho Kim and Chang-Yang Lee
- Does history matter for the relationship between R&D, innovation, and productivity? pp. 1335-1368

- Elena Huergo and Lourdes Moreno
- Projects, paths, and practices: sustaining and leveraging project-based relationships pp. 1369-1402

- Stephan Manning and Jörg Sydow
- Commercializing academic research: the quality of faculty patenting pp. 1403-1437

- Dirk Czarnitzki, Katrin Hussinger and Cédric Schneider
- Technological learning environments and organizational practices--cross-sectoral evidence from Britain pp. 1439-1474

- Isabel Maria Bodas Freitas
- The impact of corporate governance practices on R&D efforts: a look at shareholders' rights, cross-listing, and control pyramid pp. 1475-1513

- Stephane Lhuillery
Volume 20, issue 4, 2011
- Alliance governance and technological performance: some evidence from biotechnology alliances pp. 969-990

- Jongwook Kim
- A new class of asymmetric exponential power densities with applications to economics and finance pp. 991-1030

- Giulio Bottazzi and Angelo Secchi
- Firm entry and institutional lock-in: an organizational ecology analysis of the global fashion design industry pp. 1031-1048

- Rik Wenting and Koen Frenken
- Appropriate business strategy for leaders and laggards -super-† pp. 1049-1079

- Alex Coad
- Swedish business research productivity pp. 1081-1118

- Olof Ejermo and Astrid Kander
- Exploring new combinations in innovation and entrepreneurship: social networks, Schumpeter, and the case of Josiah Wedgwood (1730--1795) pp. 1119-1151

- Mark Dodgson
- The role of financial analysts in the strategy formation process of business firms pp. 1153-1187

- Dodo zu Knyphausen-Aufseß, Michael Mirow and Lars Schweizer
- Back-office intricacy: the description of financial objects in an investment bank pp. 1189-1213

- Fabian Muniesa, Dominique Chabert, Marceline Ducrocq-Grondin and Susan V. Scott
- Was Schumpeter a Marxist? pp. 1215-1222

- Nathan Rosenberg
- A comment on Nathan Rosenberg's question: "Was Schumpeter a Marxist?" pp. 1223-1227

- Louis Galambos
- Comment on Nathan Rosenberg, "Was Schumpeter a Marxist?" pp. 1229-1233

- William Lazonick
Volume 20, issue 3, 2011
- Trading "best practices"--a good practice? pp. 683-719

- Benjamin Wellstein and Alfred Kieser
- Before Bayh--Dole: public research funding, patents, and pharmaceutical innovation (1945--1965) pp. 721-749

- Roberto Mazzoleni
- Government-driven knowledge networks as precursors to emerging sectors: a case of the hydrogen energy sector in Korea pp. 751-787

- Hyundo Choi, Sangook Park and Jeong-Dong Lee
- The dynamics of superior performance among the largest firms in the global oil industry, 1954--2008 pp. 789-824

- Marc Baaij, Abe de Jong and Jan van Dalen
- Effects of ancestral populations on entrepreneurial founding and failure: private liquor stores in Alberta, 1994--2003 pp. 825-853

- Glen Dowell and Robert J. David
- Learning through the international joint venture: lessons from the experience of China's automotive sector pp. 855-907

- Kyung-Min Nam
- Capabilities of large services outsourcing firms: the "outsourcing plus staff transfer model" in EDS and IBM pp. 909-940

- Marcela Miozzo and Damian Grimshaw
- Flexible labor and innovation performance: evidence from longitudinal firm-level data pp. 941-968

- Haibo Zhou, Ronald Dekker and Alfred Kleinknecht
Volume 20, issue 2, 2011
- Firm dynamics and productivity growth: a comparison of the retail trade and manufacturing sectors pp. 367-395

- John Baldwin and Wulong Gu
- Do venture capitalists have a bias against investment in academic spin-offs? Evidence from the micro- and nanotechnology sector in the UK pp. 397-432

- Federico Munari and Laura Toschi
- Why are firms challenging conventional wisdom on moral hazard? Revisiting the fair wage--effort hypothesis pp. 433-455

- Pablo Arocena, Mikel Villanueva, Raquel Arévalo and Xosé Vázquez
- Does structure influence growth? A panel data econometric assessment of "relatively less developed" countries, 1979--2003 pp. 457-510

- Ester Silva and Aurora Teixeira
- The informal recruitment channel and the quality of job-worker matches: an analysis on Italian survey data pp. 511-554

- Valentina Meliciani and Debora Radicchia
- The dynamics of knowledge stocks and knowledge flows: innovation consequences of recruitment and collaboration in biotech pp. 555-583

- Andreas Al-Laham, Daniel Tzabbar and Terry L. Amburgey
- Drivers and impacts in the globalization of corporate R&D: an introduction based on the European experience pp. 585-603

- Pietro Moncada-Paternò-Castello, Marco Vivarelli and Peter Voigt
- How do different drivers of R&D investment in foreign locations affect domestic firm performance? An analysis based on Swiss panel micro data pp. 605-640

- Spyros Arvanitis and Heinz Hollenstein
- Multinationals, R&D, and productivity: evidence for UK manufacturing firms pp. 641-659

- Dolores Añón Higón, Miguel Manjon Antolin and Juan A. Mañez
- The innovative performance of German multinationals abroad: evidence from the European community innovation survey pp. 661-681

- Franziska Kampik and Bernhard Dachs
Volume 20, issue 1, 2011
- No place like home? Relocation, capabilities, and firm survival in the German machine tool industry after World War II pp. 1-28

- Guido Buenstorf and Christina Guenther
- Product innovation and firm growth: evidence from the integrated circuit industry pp. 29-56

- Marco Corsino and Roberto Gabriele
- Industrial evolution through complementary convergence: the case of IT security pp. 57-89

- Jens Frøslev Christensen
- Balancing specialized and generic capabilities in the provision of integrated solutions pp. 91-131

- Federica Ceci and Andrea Masini
- Trade, industrial structure, and brand pp. 133-174

- Yen-Heng Henry Chen
- Cyclical industrial dynamics in the global IT sector: origins and sequencing pp. 175-200

- Hao Tan
- The organization, economics, and policy of scientific research: what we do know and what we don't know--an agenda for research pp. 201-213

- Cristiano Antonelli, Chiara Franzoni and Aldo Geuna
- The role of search in university productivity: inside, outside, and interdisciplinary dimensions pp. 215-251

- James Adams and J. Roger Clemmons
- Scientific productivity and academic promotion: a study on French and Italian physicists pp. 253-294

- Francesco Lissoni, Jacques Mairesse, Fabio Montobbio and Michele Pezzoni
- The great divide in scientific productivity: why the average scientist does not exist pp. 295-336

- Stijn Kelchtermans and Reinhilde Veugelers
- Stimulating graduates' research-oriented careers: does academic research matter? pp. 337-365

- Mauro Sylos-Labini and Natalia Zinovyeva
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