All Stories

  1. The decline of science in corporate R&D
  2. Married to the firm? A large-scale investigation of the social context of ownership
  3. Market frictions and the competitive advantage of internal labor markets
  4. Killing the Golden Goose? The Decline of Science in Corporate R&D
  5. Motivation and sorting of human capital in open innovation
  6. How does Firm Size Moderate Firms' Ability to Benefit from Invention? Evidence from Patents and Scientific Publications
  7. Innovation and firm value: An investigation of the changing role of patents, 1985–2007
  8. Spreading the Word: Geography, Policy, and Knowledge Spillovers
  9. Capital Markets and Firm Organization: How Financial Development Shapes European Corporate Groups
  10. Make, buy, organize: The interplay between research, external knowledge, and firm structure
  11. Do Labor Regulations Affect the Formation of Corporate Groups?
  12. Cumulative Innovation and Market Value: Evidence from Patent Citations
  13. The Organization of R&D in American Corporations: The Determinants and Consequences of Decentralization
  14. Innovation in Business Groups
  15. Intracompany Governance and Innovation
  16. University Knowledge Transfer: Private Ownership, Incentives, and Local Development Objectives
  17. Business Group Affiliation, Financial Development and Market Structure: Evidence from Europe
  18. Innovation in Business Groups
  19. Intracompany Governance and Innovation
  20. Performance, Firm Size, and the 'Basicness' of Research
  21. organization of production, the: an international perspective
  22. AmaPat - Innovation, Ownership and Financials for European Firms: Data Overview
  23. Amapat - Innovation, Ownership and Accounting for European Firms: Presentation
  24. Amapat - Innovation, Ownership and Accounting for European Firms: Audio of Presentation
  25. Married to the Firm? Family Ownership, Performance and Survival in Private Firms
  26. When is a Nexus of Contracts More Firm-Like? Theory and Evidence from Business Groups
  27. Knowledge Flow and Sequential Innovation: Implications for Technology Diffusion, R&D and Market Value