Innovation is a key factor not just in the Research and Design process, but in research, institutions, and society. This research handbook is unique in examining research findings and new theoretical models relating to innovation at a number of analytic levels: projects, organizations, industrial sectors, and society.
1. Product and Process Innovation, Scientific Research, Knowledge Dynamics, and Institutional Change: An Introduction,Marius Meeus and Jerald Hage Section I: Product and Process Innovation 2. Introduction,Marius Meeus and Charles Edquist 3. Product and Process Innovation: A Review of Organizational and Environmental Determinants,Faribroz Dmanapour and Deepa Aravind 4. Interorganizational Relations and Innovation: Review and Speculation,Marius Meeus and Jan Faber 5. Knowledge-based View of Radical Innovation: Toyota Prius Case,Ikujiro Nonaka and Vesa Peltokorpi 6. Markets and Industrial Innovation,Stan Metcalfe 7. Can Regulations Induce Environmental Innovations? An Analysis of the Role of Regulations in the Pulp and Paper Industry in Selected Industrialized Countries,James Foster, Mikael Hild?n, and Niclas Adler 8. Innovation Policy Enhancing Product and Process Innovation in a Systems of Innovation Perspective,Charles Edquist Section II: Scientific Research 9. Introduction,Gretchen Jordan and Jerald Hage 10. Factors Influencing Advances in Science and Technology: Variation due to Diversity in Research Profiles,Gretchen Jordan 11. Network Attributes Impacting the Generation and Flow of Knowledge Within and From the Basic Science Community,Susan Mohrman, Jay Galbraith, and Peter Monge 12. Innovation, Learning, and Macro-Institutional Change: The Limits of the Market Model as an Organizing Principle for Research Systems,Luke Georghiou 13. How is Innovation Influencedl'