Special Issue: Frontiers of Organization Science, Part 1 of 2: Regional Industrial Identity: Cluster Configurations and Economic Development
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] H. Rao. The Social Construction of Reputation: Certification Contests, Legitimation, and the Survival of Organizations in the American Automobile Industry: 1895–1912 , 1994 .
[2] A. Chandler,et al. Regional Advantage: Culture and Competition in Silicon Valley and Route 128 , 1994 .
[3] R. Florida. The Rise of the Creative Class : And How It's Transforming Work, Leisure, Community and Everyday Life , 2003 .
[4] J. Jacobs,et al. The Economy of Cities , 1969 .
[5] S. Klepper. Industry Life Cycles , 1997 .
[6] Ezra W. Zuckerman,et al. The Categorical Imperative: Securities Analysts and the Illegitimacy Discount , 1999, American Journal of Sociology.
[7] P. Krugman. Geography and Trade , 1992 .
[8] Olaf G. Rughase. What is Organizational Identity , 2006 .
[9] F. G. Kilgour. The evolution of the book , 1998 .
[10] Greta Hsu,et al. Identities, Genres, and Organizational Forms , 2005 .
[11] B. Kogut,et al. Localization of Knowledge and the Mobility of Engineers in Regional Networks , 1999 .
[12] J. Hannigan. Las Vegas: The Social Production of an All‐American City. By Mark Gottdiener, Claudia C. Collins, and David R. Dickens. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell Publishers. Pp. viii+290. $22.95 (paper). , 2000 .
[13] Reviewed by Jonathan Levie. Managing New Industry Creation: Global Knowledge Formation and Entrepreneurship in High Technology , 2003 .
[14] James E. Rauch. Does History Matter Only When it Matters Little? the Case of City-Indu Try Location , 1993 .
[15] Joel Podolny,et al. Critiquing the critics: an approach for the comparative evaluation of critical schemas , 2005 .
[16] M. Porter. Clusters and the new economics of competition. , 1998, Harvard business review.
[17] Jesper B. Sørensen. Executive Migration and Interorganizational Competition , 1999 .
[18] M. Webber. Territories, boundaries and consciousness: the changing geographies of the Finnish-Russian border , 1996 .
[19] A. Venables,et al. BUZZ : THE ECONOMIC FORCE OF THE CITY , 2002 .
[20] Harvey Molotch,et al. History Repeats Itself, but How? City Character, Urban Tradition, and the Accomplishment of Place , 2000, American Sociological Review.
[21] Juan Alcácer,et al. Knowledge Seeking and Location Choice of Foreign Direct Investment in the United States , 2002, Manag. Sci..
[22] J. Schumpeter,et al. Business Cycles: A Theoretical, Historical, and Statistical Analysis of the Capitalist Process , 1940 .
[23] J. Feagin. The Global Context of Metropolitan Growth: Houston and the Oil Industry , 1985, American Journal of Sociology.
[24] Anand Swaminathan,et al. SOCIAL MOVEMENT THEORY AND THE EVOLUTION OF NEW ORGANIZATIONAL FORMS. , 1999 .
[25] Michael Hannan,et al. Foundations of a Theory of Social Forms , 2000 .
[26] G. Carroll,et al. Why the Microbrewery Movement? Organizational Dynamics of Resource Partitioning in the U.S. Brewing Industry1 , 2000, American Journal of Sociology.
[27] S. Eisenstadt. The Construction of Collective Identities , 1998 .
[28] Pino G. Audia,et al. The Social Structure of Entrepreneurial Activity: Geographic Concentration of Footwear Production in the United States, 1940–19891 , 2000, American Journal of Sociology.
[29] J. Howard. Social Psychology of Identities , 2000 .
[30] William J. Abernathy,et al. Patterns of Industrial Innovation , 1978 .
[31] J. Lerner. An Empirical Exploration of a Technology Race , 1997 .
[32] David G. McKendrick,et al. In the Bud? Disk Array Producers as a (Possibly) Emergent Organizational Form , 2000 .
[33] O. Morgenstern,et al. Business Cycles: A Theoretical, Historical, and Statistical Analysis of the Capitalist Process. , 1940 .
[34] Allen J. Scott,et al. The Roepke Lecture in Economic Geography The Collective Order Of Flexible Production Agglomerations: Lessons for Local Economic Development Policy and Strategic Choice , 1992 .
[35] Toby E. Stuart,et al. The geography of opportunity: spatial heterogeneity in founding rates and the performance of biotechnology firms , 2003 .
[36] David G. McKendrick,et al. On the Genesis of Organizational Forms: Evidence from the Market for Disk Arrays , 2000 .
[37] Howard E. Aldrich,et al. Fools Rush in? The Institutional Context of Industry Creation , 1994 .
[38] H. Thomas,et al. Competitive Groups as Cognitive Communities: The Case of Scottish Knitwear Manufacturers Revisited , 1989 .
[39] Francesca Polletta,et al. COLLECTIVE IDENTITY AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS , 2001 .
[40] Toby E. Stuart,et al. Syndication Networks and the Spatial Distribution of Venture Capital Investments1 , 1999, American Journal of Sociology.
[41] C. Fombrun,et al. Macrocultures: Determinants and Consequences , 1994 .
[42] Karen A. Cerulo. IDENTITY CONSTRUCTION: New Issues, New Directions , 1997 .
[43] W. P. Barnett,et al. The red queen in organizational evolution , 2007 .
[44] M. Hannan,et al. Structural Inertia and Organizational Change , 1984 .
[45] H. Rao,et al. Institutional Change in Toque Ville: Nouvelle Cuisine as an Identity Movement in French Gastronomy1 , 2003, American Journal of Sociology.
[46] Olav Sorenson. Social networks and industrial geography , 2003 .
[47] K. Green. National innovation systems: a comparative analysis , 1996 .
[48] Elaine Romanelli,et al. Anatomy of Cluster Development: Emergence and Convergence in the US Human Biotherapeutics, 1976-2003 , 2007 .
[49] Donald N. Sull,et al. FROM COMMUNITY OF INNOVATION TO COMMUNITY OF INERTIA: THE RISE AND FALL OF THE U.S. TIRE INDUSTRY. , 2001 .
[50] Celia V. Harquail,et al. Organizational images and member identification. , 1994 .
[51] R. Florida. The Rise of the Creative Class , 2002 .
[52] Alan D. Meyer,et al. Organizational Emergence: The Origin and Transformation of Branson, Missouri's Musical Theaters , 2004, Organ. Sci..
[53] M. Tushman,et al. Technological Discontinuities and Organizational Environments , 1986 .
[54] Teresa Caldeira,et al. Variations on a Theme Park: The New American City and the End of Public Space , 1994 .
[55] S. Hewa. Medical technology: A pandora's box? , 1994, The Journal of medical humanities.
[56] B. Kogut,et al. Technological capabilities and Japanese foreign direct investment in the United States , 1991 .
[57] Kathleen M. Eisenhardt,et al. The Entrepreneurship Dynamic: Origins of Entrepreneurship and the Evolution of Industries , 2002 .
[58] Steven Klepper,et al. The Evolution of the U.S. Automobile Industry and Detroit as its Capital , 2001 .
[59] M. Gottdiener,et al. Las Vegas: The Social Production of an All-American City , 2000 .
[60] S. Eisenstadt,et al. The construction of collective identity , 1995, European Journal of Sociology.
[61] M. Feldman,et al. R&D spillovers and the ge-ography of innovation and production , 1996 .
[62] S. Klepper,et al. Time Paths in the Diffusion of Product Innovations , 1982 .
[63] Maryann P. Feldman,et al. Where Science Comes to Life: University Bioscience, Commercial Spin-offs, and Regional Economic Development , 2000 .
[64] W. Arthur. ‘Silicon Valley’ locational clusters: when do increasing returns imply monopoly? , 1990 .
[65] M. Weber,et al. The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism , 1937 .