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New Technology and Regional Development
New Technology and Regional Development
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€192.20
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behavioural approach
Category=KCC
Centre Periphery Approach
CNC Machine Centre
Community Regional Policy
Dutch urban system
economic restructuring
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
European Community regional development policy
family enterprises
Federal Republic Of Germany
Firm Formation Rates
Fundamental Research
High Growth Firms
High Growth Sectors
High Technology Firms
industrial geography
industrial plants
innovation decision-making
innovation factor
Innovation Life Cycle
Innovative Firms
Kondratiev Long Wave
Location Specific Advantages
microeconomic industrial change
Netherlands
organisational learning
Peripheral Devices
Philips
Product Cycle Goods
Product Cycle Model
R&D policy
Radical Product Innovation
Rational Regional Policy
regional innovation systems
resource allocation
Segmented Economy
spatial distribution of technological change
spatial economics
strategy formulation
technological change
Technology Parks
Transnational Parts
Tv Receiver
Weberian Location Theories
West Germany
Young High Tech Firms
Product details
- ISBN 9780709931065
- Weight: 510g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 27 Nov 1986
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
First Published in 2004. Since the second half of the seventies, a period of economic recession, a growing interest for technological change can be noticed in all ‘old’ industrial countries. The reason for this phenomenon is the conviction that the economic future of these countries will depend to a large degree on their ability to create new products and processes and to make these commercially viable. Hence the stimulation and subsidising of all kinds of Research and Development (R&D) activities by the governments of these countries. Against this background it was certainly not unexpected that the IGU Commisson on Industrial Change, presided by Godfrey Linge, decided to organise a congress on ‘Technology and Industrial Change.’ This congress was held in August 1985 at Nijmegen in the Netherlands. In this book some of the papers presented there are published. We are very happy that we were allowed to include the very interesting contributions of the representatives of Philips in Eindhoven and of the European Commission in Brussels.
Bert Van Der Knapp, Egbert Wever
New Technology and Regional Development
€192.20
