Extra-Organizational Knowledge Processes, 2nd Ed.
Managing Knowledge -- Unit 5
Publisher: The Open University, 2001
ISBN: 0-7492-7759-9
Synopsis:
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Table of Contents:
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- Introduction
- 1.1 Aims
- 1.2 Learning Objectives
- The Rationale of External Activity
- 2.1 Knowledge and Markets
- 2.2 Public Policy Objectives in Knowledge Markets
- 2.3 The Balance Between Public and Private Knowledge
- 2.4 Why Organizations Want External Knowledge
- 2.5 Why Organizations are Willing to Share Knowledge
- 2.6 The Changing Nature of Knowledge Production
- 2.7 Knowledge-Sharing Mechanisms
- 2.8 External Knowledge Services
- Institutions and Levels
- 3.1 Sectoral Level Institutions
- Private institutions in the chemical industry
- The Chemical Industries Association (CIA)
- The Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
- European and international institutions in the chemical industry
- 3.2 National Level Knowledge Creation
- 3.3 The Regulatory System
- The global system of administration
- EU legislative framework
- United Kongdom legislation
- New regulatory developments — the case of digital technologies
- Collaboration — Networks and Alliances
- 4.1 Types of Collaboration
- Limited co-operation
- Moderate co-operation
- Broad co-operation
- 4.2 Collaboration — What is a Network Organization?
- The property sector
- The motor industry
- Small firms
- Complex technologies
- The public sector
- 4.3 Networks — Costs and Benefits
- 4.4 Promoting and Managing Networks
- Operating within the network
- 4.5 Networks — Their Increasing Span
- Technology Transfer
- 5.1 What is Technology Transfer?
- 5.2 Technology Transfer and Purpose
- 5.3 Transfer Processes and Patterns of Diffusion
- The processes
- The patterns of diffusion
- 5.4 Mechanisms of Technology Transfer
- The sponsors of technology transfer
- Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs)
- International technology transfer
- Conclusion