1994
DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.cje.a035286
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The economics of technical change

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Cited by 734 publications
(437 citation statements)
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“…A rich and wide literature in the field of economics of innovation does indeed suggest that firms deeply differ also in their ability to innovate: for detailed surveys and discussions see Freeman (1994), Freeman andSoete (1997) Nelson (1981) and (1991), Pavitt (1999), Dosi, Orsenigo and Sylos Labini (2005), Dosi (1988).…”
Section: Technological Innovativenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A rich and wide literature in the field of economics of innovation does indeed suggest that firms deeply differ also in their ability to innovate: for detailed surveys and discussions see Freeman (1994), Freeman andSoete (1997) Nelson (1981) and (1991), Pavitt (1999), Dosi, Orsenigo and Sylos Labini (2005), Dosi (1988).…”
Section: Technological Innovativenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Freeman 1991(Freeman , 1994(Freeman , 1995Lundvall and Borrás, 1999;OECD, 2001;Smith, 2000Smith, , 2002Tidd et al, 1997). Thus, conscious network-building efforts of participatory FLAs are crucial, indeed -as well as their unintended impacts on networking.…”
Section: Evolutionary Theorising Flas and Implications For Sti Policymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The neoclassical school aligns itself with the perspective of unlimited rationality within human behavior and with an expected balance between economic relations. In turn, innovation would be a natural consequence of a, homogeneous, linear and natural in the course of productive activity mechanical process, i.e., internal to the firm's production system, which results in average production cost depreciation (Bell & Pavitt, 1993;Dosi, 1982;Freeman, 1994).…”
Section: Innovation: Concept and Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%