A great deal of research has been conducted on creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship. Although highly interrelated, these three areas have developed largely independently of one another.
The Oxford Handbook of Creative Industries is a reference work, bringing together many of the world's leading scholars in the application of creativity in economics, business and management, law, policy studies, organization studies, and ...
This volume is an important source of information for students, scholars, practitioners, and others interested in understanding the complexity of the group creative process and tapping the creative potential of groups and teams.
This volume provides a wide range of perspectives on the nature of innovation management and its influences.
Written by leading scholars, The Wiley Handbook of Entrepreneurship provides a distinctive overview of methodological, theoretical and paradigm changes in the area of entrepreneurship research.
[Reprinted in 40 Years of Research on Rent Seeking, eds R.D. Congleton, A.L. Hillman and K.A. Konrad, Volume 2, Berlin: Springer, pp. 245–64]. Minniti, M. (2008), 'The role of government policy on entrepreneurial activity: productive, ...
The present book is a modest attempt to fill in this gap.
creativity. Ronald. S. Burt. In theory, social networks are not essential to creativity. People are creative when they ... such that people in the same group display similar behavior and beliefs.1 Sticky Information Within their group, ...
Although the authors are from the fields of psychology education, business, engineering, and law, readers from all disciplines will find the coverage of this book beneficial in deepening their understanding of creativity and innovation, and ...
... Dean A. Cortopassi, Marc J. Epstein, Jerald Hage, Craig Hall, Benjamin F. Jones, David J. Kappos, David Karohl, ... of Chicago's graduate school of business in 2003, I wrote the grant proposal and submitted it to Lynn Preston.
14) an innovation system is defined as: “all important economic, social, political, organizational, and other factors that influence the development, diffusion, and use of innovations”. Gregersen and Johnson (1998, p.