Networks for Learning and Knowledge Creation in Biotechnology

Networks for Learning and Knowledge Creation in Biotechnology

by Amalya Lumerman Oliver
Networks for Learning and Knowledge Creation in Biotechnology

Networks for Learning and Knowledge Creation in Biotechnology

by Amalya Lumerman Oliver

eBook

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Overview

Scientists in the biotechnology sector have developed a vast array of products and procedures, including drugs, diagnostics, agricultural products and veterinary procedures. This is made possible through various intra- and inter-organizational collaborations between the academic and private sectors, and through the establishment of networks for learning. In Networks for Learning and Knowledge Creation in Biotechnology, Amalya Lumerman Oliver shows how, in many respects, the organizational structure of the industry parallels one of its most important innovations – recombinant DNA (rDNA). She shows how the concept of recombination can be used to explain a number of organizational elements, including biotechnology firms, the form of university-based spin-offs, scientific entrepreneurship, and trust and contracts in learning collaborations and networks. The result is a stimulating account of how multiple theoretical perspectives can be used to understand the structure of the biotechnology industry.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780511737732
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 02/09/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Amalya Lumerman Oliver is Associate Professor of Organizational Sociology at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel.

Table of Contents

List of figures; List of tables; Acknowledgements; 1. Networks, collaborations and learning and knowledge creation; 2. The biotechnology industry through the lenses of organizational and networks scholarship; 3. New organizational forms for knowledge creation in biotechnology; 4. Scientific entrepreneurship; 5. Science and discoveries in the context of private and public knowledge creation and learning (with Julia Porter Liebeskind); 6. In search for university-industry collaborations: linear and chaotic networking processes; 7. Trust in collaborations and the social structure of academic research; 8. Organizational learning and strategic alliances: recombination and duality of competition and collaboration; 9. Further directions for understanding interorganizational collaborations and learning; References; Index.
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