Advancing knowledge and the knowledge economy : / Kahin,Brian
Material type: TextPublication details: The MIT Press London 2006Description: 503 pISBN:- 9780262612142
- 658.4038 K12
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | UE-Central Library | 658.4038 K12 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | T10811 |
1. Prospects for knowledge policy
2. Optimizing the use of knowledge
3. OECD work on knowledge and the knowledge economy
4. Measuring knowledge
5. Measuring knowledge and its economics effects: the role of official statistics
6. Assessing innovation capacity: fitting strategy, indicators, and policy to the right framework
7. Knowledge communities
8. Interactive learning, social capital, and economic performance
9. Social capital, networks and communities of knowledge
10. Knowing communities in organizations
11. The changing role of institution
12. Epistemic infrastructure in the rise of the knowledge economy
13. Universities and the knowledge economy
14. The impact of ICT on tertiary education: advances and promises
15. The bayh-dole act of 1980 and university-industry technology transfer: A policy model for other governments?
16. Knowledge and place
17. The changing dynamics of the global market for the highly skilled
18. Knowledge in space: what hope for the poor parts of the globe?
19. New models of innovation
20. Democratizing innovation: the evolving phenomenon of user innovation
21. Innovation, experimentation, and technological change
22. Knowledge, platforms, and the division of labor
23. Between “knowledge” and “The economy”: Notes on the scientific study of designs
24. Models of control and cooperation
25. Patent quantity and quality: trends and policy implications
26. Blurred boundaries: tension between open scientific resources and commercial exploitation of knowledge in biomedical research
27. The economics of technology sharing: open source and beyond
28. “Open and collaborative” biomedical research: theory and evidence
29. Critical tensions in the evolution of open source software
30. Emerging infrastructure
31. Toward a cyber-infrastructure for enhanced scientific collaboration: providing its “soft” foundation may be the hardest part
32. Cyber infrastructure in the making: can we get there from here?
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