All Stories

  1. Innovation and entrepreneurship in East Asia during the digital era: post-pandemic prospects
  2. Hong Kong as a Global Business and Financial Hub
  3. Introduction—Hong Kong as a global business hub: lessons from institutional resilience and strategic responses
  4. Differential Impact of Fintech and GDP on Bank Performance: Global Evidence
  5. Developments in key aspects of business and management in the Asia Pacific: human resources, leadership, ethics and entrepreneurship
  6. Differential Impact of Fintech and GDP on Bank Performance: Global Evidence
  7. The international strategy for Korean pop music: what makes K-pop listed on Billboard Hot 100?
  8. Alibaba and Coupang in the spotlight
  9. Female Empowerment and Radical Empathy for the Sustainability of Creative Industries: The Case of K-Pop
  10. Gendered melancholia as cultural branding: fandom participation in the K-pop community
  11. Inertia: Stalled governance reforms in the Korean chaebols amid economic maturation
  12. The end of rent sharing: corporate governance reforms in South Korea
  13. After the storm: how Hong Kong can hold on to its status as a global business hub in the Asia-Pacific
  14. Unintended consequences of knowledge management during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021: the case of Netflix
  15. A new global division of labour in venture capital flows: Coupang’s IPO success at the New York Stock Exchange
  16. Corporate governance reforms amidst economic maturation and democratization: the case of the Korean chaebol since the 1990s
  17. The end of rent sharing: corporate governance reforms in South Korea
  18. Editorial Remarks (Vol. 4, No. 2)
  19. The Comfort Women Issue for a Transnational Paradigm
  20. The Enigma of Obesity in the World’s Fittest Nation
  21. Radical Empathy
  22. Editorial Remarks (Vol. 3, No. 3-4)
  23. I Used to Like Book Stores
  24. Writing New History of Comfort Women
  25. The enigma of Chinese business: understanding corporate performance through managerial ties
  26. From Globalization to Glocalization: Configuring Korean Pop Culture to Meet Glocal Demands
  27. Trends in Chinese management and business: change, Confucianism, leadership, knowledge & innovation
  28. Top Heavy: Globalization and Inequality in South Korea
  29. Editorial Remarks (Vol. 2, No. 2)
  30. Korea vs. Italy: Why Culture is Important in Keeping your Country Competitive
  31. Internal Diaspora: Kang Hang’s Japan Experience and Intellectual Isolation in Joseon
  32. Red Ink
  33. Mafioso, Big Business and the Financial Crisis
  34. New perspectives on East Asian leadership in the age of globalization: local grounding and historical comparisons in the Asia Pacific region
  35. Changing facets of leadership in East Asia: globalization, innovation and performance in Japan, South Korea and China
  36. From business to politics: cross-border CEOs and political leadership in Japan and South Korea
  37. Editorial Remarks for the First Issue (Vol. 1, No. 1-4)
  38. Japanese Webtoon: Marketing Manga Online Using South Korean Platform Designs
  39. When there is No K-pop Expert in Academia
  40. The state as a regulator of business ethics in Edo Japan: the Tokugawa authority structure and private interests
  41. Selling trust in cyber space: social networking service (SNS) providers and social capital amongst netizens in South Korea
  42. From Localization to Glocalization: Contriving Korean Pop Culture to Meet Glocal Demands
  43. Islam and Local Culture: The Peril of State Violence and Hallyu Fandom in Indonesia (With Reference to Palestine)
  44. Chaebols’ Innovation Management without an Economic Miracle
  45. From credible threats to credible commitments? the changing face of South Korean corruption
  46. Relinquishing business ethics from a theoretical deadlock: the requirement for local grounding and historical comparisons in the Asia Pacific region
  47. Business ethics and the role of context: institutionalism, history and comparisons in the Asia Pacific region
  48. The state as a regulator of business ethics in Edo Japan: the Tokugawa authority structure and private interests
  49. A League of their Own: Female Supporters ofHallyuand Korea-Japan Relations
  50. K-pop in Korea: How the Pop Music Industry Is Changing a Post-Developmental Society
  51. Mass Media Technologies and Popular Music Genres: K-pop and YouTube
  52. When Tourist Audiences Encounter Each Other: Diverging Learning Behaviors of K-pop Fans from Japan and Indonesia
  53. Intuition and consilience: The creation of clinical and symptomatic knowledge in entertainment industries
  54. Joining Innovation Efforts Using both Feed-forward and Feedback Learning: The Case of Japanese and Korean Universities
  55. From Nationalistic Diaspora to Transnational Diaspora: The Evolution of Identity Crisis among the Korean-Japanese
  56. Foreigners Cometh! Paths to Multiculturalism in Japan, Korea and Taiwan
  57. Strategies of innovation for firms in the emerging markets
  58. Leveraging corporate success via R&D and niche market strategies: The case of Shin Ramyeon Born Global in Korea
  59. Migration and Multicultural Contention in East Asia
  60. Rent-sharing: Organizational and technological innovations under military regimes in South Korea and Turkey
  61. Education and Development: Why are Koreans Obsessed with Learning?
  62. New product development and commercialisation at SK Chemical
  63. Virtual technology marketing and governance problems: how can firms benefit from dynamic boundaries?
  64. The development of cluster tool controllers (CTC) for semiconductor manufacturing: the case of KAIST and Jusung Engineering, Co.
  65. Mad Technology
  66. Changes of NIS in Japan, Korea, and Taiwan
  67. Conclusions
  68. Globalization and “Mad” Technology
  69. Innovation Strategies of the Korean Chaebols
  70. Introduction
  71. Japan’s Commercialization Problem
  72. National R&D Investments in Korea
  73. Prospects for East Asian Economic Governance
  74. The Semiconductor Industry in Taiwan
  75. Why Governance Reforms are Not Effective
  76. Recasting East Asian Economic Governance: An Institutional Perspective
  77. Knowledge integration capabilities of Japanese companies: reconstructing intra-firm networks for technology commercialisation
  78. Networked path towards technology innovation: the case of Taiwan semiconductor manufacturing company
  79. "Mad" technology: changes in the national innovation systems of Japan, Korea and Taiwan
  80. The Mafioso State: State-led market bypassing in South Korea and Turkey
  81. Shooting at a Moving Target: Four Theoretical Problems in Explaining the Dynamics of the Chaebol
  82. Korea: The Search for Sovereignty
  83. Korea's Growth and Industrial Transformation
  84. Nuclear Clouds Over the Korean Peninsula and Japan
  85. Joining Innovation Efforts Using both Feed-forward and Feedback Learning