Entrepreneurial Universities in Innovation-Seeking Countries Challen
What does it mean for a university to be entrepreneurial? This global concept, which enables universities to attain social accountability through innovation and participation in local economic development, has become more important than ever in today's kn
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How does technological advance occur, and what are the strategic processes and institutions involved? How are new businesses created? To what extent is intellectual property protected? Which cultural characteristics serve to promote or impede innovation? In what ways is wealth distributed or concentrated?
These are among the key questions framing policy and strategic decisionmaking at firm, industry, national, and regional levels. A primary feature of the series is to consider the dynamics of innovation and entrepreneurship in the context of globalization, with particular respect to emerging markets, such as China, India, Russia, and Latin America. (For example, what are the implications of China’s rapid transition from providing low-cost manufacturing and services to becoming an innovation powerhouse? How do the perspectives of history and geography explain this phenomenon?) Contributions from researchers in a wide variety of fields will connect and relate the relationships and interdependencies among (1) innovation, (2) political regime, and (3) economic and social development. We will consider whether innovation is demonstrated differently across sectors (e.g., health, education, and technology) and disciplines (e.g., social sciences and physical sciences), with an emphasis on discovering emerging patterns, factors, triggers, catalysts, and accelerators to innovation, and their impact on future research, practice, and policy. This series will delve into what are the sustainable and sufficient growth mechanisms for the foreseeable future for developed, knowledge-based economies and societies (such as the EU and the United States) in the context of multiple, concurrent, and interconnected “tipping-point” effects with short-term (MENA) as well as long-term (China and India) effects from a geostrategic, geoeconomic, geopolitical, and geo-technological set of perspectives.
This conceptualization lies at the heart of the series, and offers to explore the correlation between democracy, innovation, and growth. Books Appearing in this Series: Unpacking Open Innovation: Highlights from a Co-Evolutionary Inquiry Manlio Del Giudice, Elias G. Carayannis, and Maria Rosaria Della Peruta The Entrepreneurial Rise in Southeast Asia: The Quadruple Helix Influence on Technological Innovation Stavros Sindakis and Christian Walter Uncertainty in Entrepreneurial Decision Making: The Competitive Advantages of Strategic Creativity Panagiotis E. Petrakis and Dimitra P. Konstantakopoulou Entrepreneurial Universities in Innovation-Seeking Countries: Challenges and Opportunities Marina Dabi´c, Jadranka Švarc, and Miguel González-Loureiro
Entrepreneurial Universities in Innovation-Seeking Countries Challenges and Opportunities
M a r i n a D a b i c´ , J a d r a n k a Š v a r c , a n d Miguel González-Loureiro
ENTREPRENEURIAL UNIVERSITIES IN INNOVATION - SEEKING COUNTRIES Copyright © Marina Dabi´c, Jadranka Švarc, and Miguel González-Loureiro 2016
All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be mad
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