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Session 1: Introduction to the management of innovation (CG)
Literature
- Anderson, P., & Tushman, M. L. 1990. Technological discontinuities and dominant designs: A cyclical model of technological change. Administrative Science Quarterly, 35 (4): 604-633.
- Dosi, G. 1982. Technological Paradigms and Technological Trajectories: A Suggested Interpretation of the Determinants and Directions of Technical Change. Research Policy, 11: 147-162.
- Henderson, R., & Clark, K. B. 1990. Architectural innovation: The reconfiguration of existing product technologies and the failure of established firms. Administrative Science Quarterly, 35 (1): 9-30.
- Pavitt, K. L. R. 1984. Sectoral patterns of technical change: towards a taxonomy and a theory. Research Policy, 13 (6): 343-373.
Session 2: Introduction to the economics of innovation (THR)
Literature
- Scotchmer, S. 2004. Innovation and Incentives, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, chapters 2, 4 and 6.
- Choi, J. P. 2002. A Dynamic Analysis of Licensing: The ‘‘Boomerang'’ Effect and Grant-Back Clauses, International Economic Review, 43: 1468-2354.
- Laursen, K., S. Moreira, T. Reichstein, and M. I. Leone. Evading the Boomerang Effect: Using the Grant-Back Clause to Further Generative Appropriability from Technology Licensing Deals. Organization Science, 28: 514-530.
Session 3: Open approaches to innovation (MP)
Literature
- Dahlander, L., Gann, D.M. 2010. How open is innovation? Research Policy, 39(6): 699-709
- Felin, T., Zenger, R.R. 2014. Closed or open innovation? Problem solving and the governance choice. Research Policy, 43: 914-925.
- Gambardella, A., Raasch, C., von Hippel, E. 2016. The user innovation paradigm: impacts on markets and welfare. Management Science, 63(5): 1450-1468
- Laursen, K., Salter, A. J. 2006. Open for Innovation: The role of openness in explaining innovative performance among UK manufacturing firms. Strategic Management Journal, 27(2): 131-150.
Session 4: Networks, collaboration and alliances (KL)
Literature
- Teece, D.J. 1986. Profiting from technological innovation: Implications for integration, collaboration, licensing, and public policy. Research Policy 15: 285-305.
- Mowery, D., Oxley, J., Silverman, B. 1996. Strategic Alliances and Interfirm Knowledge Transfers. Strategic Management Journal, 17 (Winter 96 special issue): 77-91.
- Ahuja, G. 2000. Collaboration networks, structural holes and innovation: a longitudinal study, Administrative Science Quarterly, 45 (3): 425-455.
- Tortoriello, M. 2015. The social underpinnings of absorptive capacity: The moderating effects of structural holes on innovation generation based on external knowledge. Strategic Management Journal, 36(4): 586-597.
Background literature:
- Cohen, W. M., & Levinthal, D. A. 1990. Absorptive capacity: A new perspective of learning and innovation. Administrative Science Quarterly, 35(1): 128-152.
Session 5: Platform-based innovation and innovation ecosystems (CC)
Literature
- Rochet J-C, Tirole J. 2006. Two-sided markets: A progress report. Rand Journal of Economics 37: 645-667
- Cennamo C., Santaló J. 2013. Platform Competition: Strategic Tradeoffs in Platform Markets, Strategic Management Journal, 34: 1331–1350
- Adner, R., & Kapoor, R. (2010). Value creation in innovation ecosystems: How the structure of technological interdependence affects firm performance in new technology generations. Strategic Management Journal, 31(3), 306–333.
- Jacobides M, Cennamo C, Gawer A (2018) Toward a theory of ecosystems. Strategic Management Journal. 39(8): 2255–2276.
Session 6: Appropriability and innovation strategy (KH)
Literature
- Ceccagnoli, M., & Rothaermel, F. T. (2008). Appropriating the returns from innovation. In Technological innovation: Generating economic results. Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
- Cohen, W. M., Nelson, R., & Walsh, J. P. (2000). Protecting their intellectual assets: Appropriability conditions and why US manufacturing firms patent (or not), NBER Working Paper No. 7552.
- Teece, D. (1986). Profiting from technological innovation: implications for integration, collaboration, licensing, and public policy. Research Policy, 15 (6): 285-305
Session 7: University-industry linkages (VT)
Literature
- Pavitt, K. 1991. What Makes Basic Research Economically Useful? Research Policy, 20: 109-119.
- Jaffe, A. 1989. Real Effects of Academic Research. American Economic Review, 79(5): 957-970.
- Agrawal, A., & Henderson, R. 2002. Putting Patents in Context: Exploring Knowledge Transfer from MIT. Management Science, 48(1), 44-60.
- Bercovitz, J., Feldman, M. 2008. Academic Entrepreneurs: Organizational Change at the Individual Level, Organization Science, 19(1): 69-89.
Background literature:
- Stephan, P. 1996. The Economics of Science, Journal of Economic Literature, 34(3): 1199-1235.
- Aghion, P., Dewatripont, M., Stein, J.C. 2008. Academic Freedom, Private-Sector Focus, and the Process of Innovation, The RAND Journal of Economics, 39(3): 617-635.
Session 8: Science, technology, and innovation policy evaluation (PH)
Literature
- Hünermund, P., Czarnitzki, D. (2019). Innovation Policy and Causality. ifo DICE Report 4 / 2019 (Winter): Innovation Policy, 3–6. https://www.ifo.de/en/publikationen/2020/journal-complete-issue/ifo-dice-report-4-2019-winter-innovation-policy
- Czarnitzki, D., Hünermund, P., and Moshgbar, N. (2020). Public Procurement of Innovation: Evidence from a German Legislative Reform. International Journal of Industrial Organization 71. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijindorg.2020.102620
- Einiö, E. (2014). R&D subsidies and company performance: evidence from geographic variation in government funding based on the ERDF population-density rule. Review of Economics and Statistics, 96(4): 710–728. https://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/abs/10.1162/REST_a_00410
- Dechezleprêtre, A., Einiö, E., Martin, R. Nguyen, K., and Van Reenen, J. (2017). Do tax incentives for research increase firm innovation? An RD Design for R&D. Working Paper. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2810915
Session 9: Organizational learning (JL)
Literature
- Brauer, M., Mammen, J., & Luger, J. (2017). Sell-offs and firm performance: A matter of experience? Journal of Management, 43(5), 1359-1387.
- Madsen, P. M., & Desai, V. (2010). Failing to learn? The effects of failure and success on organizational learning in the global orbital launch vehicle industry. Academy of Management Journal, 53(3), 451-476.
- Posen, H. E., & Levinthal, D. A. (2012). Chasing a moving target: Exploitation and exploration in dynamic environments. Management Science, 58(3), 587-601.
- Zollo, M. (2009). Superstitious learning with rare strategic decisions: Theory and evidence from corporate acquisitions. Organization Science, 20(5), 894-908.
Session 10: Employee mobility (JB)
Literature
- Choudhury, P. (2022). Geographic Mobility, Immobility, and Geographic Flexibility–A Review and Agenda for Research on the Changing Geography of Work. Academy of Management Annals, 16(1), 258-296.
- Kacperczyk, A., & Balachandran, C. (2018). Vertical and horizontal wage dispersion and mobility outcomes: Evidence from the Swedish microdata. Organization Science, 29(1), 17-38.
- Groysberg, B., Lee, L. E., & Nanda, A. (2008). Can they take it with them? The portability of star knowledge workers' performance. Management Science, 54(7), 1213-1230.
- Stadler, C., Helfat, C. E., & Verona, G. (2022). Transferring knowledge by transferring individuals: Innovative technology use and organizational performance in multiunit firms. Organization Science, 33(1), 253-274.
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