Content
2024, Volume 51, Issue 3
- 337-351 Value dissonance in research(er) assessment: individual and perceived institutional priorities in review, promotion, and tenure
by Tony Ross-Hellauer & Thomas Klebel & Petr Knoth & Nancy Pontika - 352-359 Comparing regulatory options: the role of epistemic policies and pragmatic consequences
by Roberto López-Mas & José Luis Luján - 360-374 Missions and Cohesion Policy: is there a match?
by Francesco Cappellano & Francesco Molica & Teemu Makkonen - 375-392 Seeing beyond silos in labour productivity research and policy
by Jen Nelles & Bertha Rohenkohl & Pei-Yu Yuan & Kevin Walsh & Tim Vorley - 393-405 Boundary work to what end? Analysing the acid mine drainage case in Gauteng, South Africa
by Nikki Funke & Dave Huitema & Arthur Petersen - 406-420 The spatial mobility network and influencing factors of the higher education population in China
by Wentian Shi & Xueying Mu & Wenlong Yang & Qinchang Gui - 421-434 The early emergence of ombuds systems in Japanese science universities
by Matthew Brummer & Sam Bamkin - 435-449 University–industry linkages in China from the agency perspective of university engagement: a systematic literature review
by Yang Liu & Wenying Fu & Daniel Schiller - 450-462 Transfer of university patents and its impact on follow-on invention
by Seokbeom Kwon - 463-476 Navigating the multiple views of value in assessing public procurement
by Maria Merisalo & Kirsi Hyytinen & Juha Oksanen & Matti Pihlajamaa & Elvira Uyarra - 477-490 Can open peer review improve uptake of preprints into policies? Evidence from a causal inference
by Chuer Xu & Qianjin Zong - 491-508 Closing the loop without reinventing the wheel: public procurement for innovation promoting a circular economy
by Stephanie Francis Grimbert & Jon Mikel Zabala-Iturriagagoitia - 509-525 Enhancing international collaboration in science, technology, and innovation to achieve sustainable development goals
by Iciar Dominguez Lacasa & Manuel Molina Vogelsang - 526-542 Citizen attitudes toward science and technology, 1957–2020: measurement, stability, and the Trump challenge
by Jon D Miller & Belén Laspra & Carmelo Polino & Glenn Branch & Mark S Ackerman & Robert T Pennock - 543-552 Peer-review procedures as practice, decision, and governance—the road to theories of peer review
by Martin Reinhart & Cornelia Schendzielorz - 553-556 Taking pluralism seriously: a new perspective on evidence-based policy
by Karim Bschir & Simon Lohse - 557-562 Perspectives on advancing innovation and human flourishing through a network of AI institutes
by Christos A Makridis & Andrew A Borkowski & Gil Alterovitz
2024, Volume 51, Issue 2
- 179-191 Gerontocracy, labor market bottlenecks, and generational crises in modern science
by Kyle Siler - 192-206 Legal–institutional design and dynamic capabilities for mission-oriented innovation agencies: a new framework
by Eduardo Spanó & Rafael Monnerat & Carlos Américo Pacheco & Maria Beatriz Machado Bonacelli - 207-217 From responsibility to risk: ethics in the Bermuda Triangle of EU research and innovation policy
by Blagovesta I Nikolova - 218-235 Multilevel innovation policy mix: impact of regional, national, and European R&D grants
by Enrique Acebo & José-Ángel Miguel-Dávila - 236-246 Public perception of scientific advisory bodies: the case of France’s Covid-19 Scientific Council
by Émilien Schultz & Jeremy K Ward & Laëtitia Atlani-Duault - 236-246 Bridging conflicting frames in policies for digital transformation
by Nunzia Coco & Cinzia Colapinto & Vladi Finotto - 247-260 Gender bias in team formation: the case of the European Science Foundation’s grants
by Michele Pezzoni & Fabiana Visentin - 261-273 Certifying complexity? The case of a European gender equality certification scheme for research-performing organizations
by Marina Cacace & Francesca Pugliese & Charikleia Tzanakou & Jörg Müller & Alain Denis & Maria Sangiuliano - 274-284 Biometrics, presents, futures: the imaginative politics of science–society orderings
by Christopher Lawless - 297-308 The precarity paradox: the precarity-driven inefficiencies of research at a public university
by António Ferreira & João Quesado Delgado - 309-323 Drivers of eco-innovation: the role of appropriability strategies and complementary assets
by Guillermo Orjuela-Ramirez & Julio Cesar Zuluaga-Jimenez & David Urbano - 324-336 From experimentation to structural change: fostering institutional entrepreneurship for public engagement in research and innovation
by Joshua B Cohen & Anne M C Loeber & ilse Marschalek & Michael J Bernstein & Vincent Blok & Raúl Tabarés & Robert Gianni & Erich Griessler
2024, Volume 51, Issue 1
- 1-14 Universities of applied sciences’ EU research project participation through the lens of differentiation
by Marco Cavallaro - 15-27 Making space for CRISPR: scientists’ translation work to make gene editing a legitimate technology
by Marit Svingen & Lisbeth Jahren - 28-41 Distrust in grant peer review—reasons and remedies
by Liv Langfeldt & Ingvild Reymert & Silje Marie Svartefoss - 42-54 A four-asset technology-based growth policy
by Gregory Tassey - 55-66 Listing quality: Chinese journal lists in incoherent valuation regimes
by Jing Wang & Willem Halffman & Serge P J M Horbach - 67-79 Navigating missions: experiences from a long-term R&I programme to transform the building sector in Austria
by Harald Rohracher & Michael Ornetzeder - 80-88 Social innovation, transformation, and public policy: towards a conceptualization and critical appraisal
by Jakob Edler & Katrin Ostertag & Johanna Schuler - 89-107 Understanding career transitions of applied researchers to universities: evidence from Germany
by Cecilia Garcia Chavez & David Howoldt & Patrick Hoyer & Maria Karaulova & Henning Kroll & Torben Schubert - 108-126 What makes an entrepreneurial university? Institutional moderators of ecosystem impacts in a developing country
by Paola Rücker Schaeffer & Bruno Brandão Fischer & Sérgio Queiroz & Gustavo Hermínio Salati Marcondes de Moraes - 127-143 Moving to Smart Specialization for sustainability: the implications on the design of monitoring indicators
by Ghinwa Moujaes - 144-148 Bringing technology to market: National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute SBIR Phase IIB projects
by Sara Nienow & Olena Leonchuk & Alan C O’Connor & Albert N Link - 149-161 The micro-dynamics of scientific choice: research project motivations among public affairs academics
by John P Nelson - 162-177 Evolution of the STIP literature: discovering the growing role of innovation governance concepts
by Sepehr Ghazinoory & Alireza Ranjbar & Tahereh Sonia Saheb
2023, Volume 50, Issue 6
- 947-949 Openness, innovation, and science policy in the age of data-driven medicine
by Graham Dutfield & Katerina Sideri - 950-960 Making sense of knowledge-brokering organisations: boundary organisations or policy entrepreneurs?
by Eleanor MacKillop & Andrew Connell & James Downe & Hannah Durrant - 961-976 Priorities in research portfolios: exploring the need for upstream research in cardiometabolic and mental health
by Wouter van de & Alfredo Yegros-Yegros & Tim Willemse & Ismael Rafols - 977-987 Diversification, integration, and opening: developments in modelling for policy
by Anja Bauer & Leo Capari & Daniela Fuchs & Titus Udrea - 988-1000 Government subsidies, private R&D, and global value chains position: the moderating role of task complexity
by Furong Qian - 1001-1017 Improving the Regional Innovation Scoreboard for policy: how about innovation efficiency?
by Peter Teirlinck & André Spithoven - 1018-1028 Co-design and its consequences: developing a shared patient engagement framework in the IMI-PARADIGM project
by Callum J Gunn & Sevgi E & Teresa Finlay & Lidewij Eva & Teun Zuiderent-Jerak & Tjerk Jan Schuitmaker-Warnaar - 1029-1043 Multilevel innovation policy mix in China: do local programmes complement national programmes?
by Xing Shi & Yating Guo & Huiping Dong & Shuai Wang - 1044-1058 Research excellence and scientific advisory boards
by Maya Göser & Stefan Wimmer & Johannes Sauer - 1059-1072 To govern or be governed: an integrated framework for AI governance in the public sector
by Hyeri Choi & Min Jae - 1073-1090 Local market, central government support, and local governments’ homegrown development strategy in high-tech industries
by Huidong Peng - 1091-1102 Fun and less fun funding: the experiential affordances of research grant conditions
by Andreas Kjær & Ea Høg - 1103-1109 Evidence-neglect: addressing a barrier to UK health and climate policy ambitions
by Theresa M Marteau
2023, Volume 50, Issue 5
- 819-830 A new facet of cumulative advantage in higher education finance
by Lars Herberholz - 831-841 Does international R&D cooperation under institutional agreements have a greater impact than those without agreements?
by Paulo Henrique & Sergio Salles-Filho & Adriana Bin & Yohanna Juk & Fernando Antonio - 842-857 European industrial policy for the green and digital revolution
by Alessio Terzi & Monika Sherwood & Aneil Singh - 858-870 Do winners pick government? How scale-up experience shapes entrepreneurs’ assessments of innovation policy mixes
by Steven Denney & Travis Southin & David A Wolfe - 871-880 Researcher roles in collaborative governance interventions
by Taru Peltola & Sanna-Riikka Saarela & Juha M & Tapio Litmanen & Jani Lukkarinen & Ismo Pölönen & Outi Ratamäki & Heli Saarikoski & Miikka Salo & Suvi Vikström - 881-892 Responding to uncertainty in the COVID-19 pandemic: perspectives from Bavaria, Germany
by Amelia Fiske & Johannes Lange & Alena Buyx & Stuart McLennan - 893-904 Herding in policy responses to coronavirus disease 2019
by Jianfeng Guo & Xuemei Zhang & Fu Gu & Jiannan Zhu & Chao Deng & Xinze Zhao & Xiaohan Yang - 905-916 Institutional logics in the open science practices of university–industry research collaboration
by Annina Lattu & Yuzhuo Cai - 917-934 Brazilian Air Force acquisition policies: observing absorptive capacity and contingent factors in aeronautical beneficiary companies
by Thiago Caliari & Mayara Bovo & Lígia Maria & Rodrigo Arnaldo - 935-946 North–South research funding dynamics of collaborative projects: researchers’ appropriation strategies of agencies’ project frameworks
by Montserrat Alom
2023, Volume 50, Issue 4
- 565-578 Are we nearly there yet? New technology adoption and labor demand in Peru
by Rafael Novella & David Rosas-Shady & Alfredo Alvarado - 579-590 Observable and unobservable causes of the gender gap in S&T funding for young researchers
by Diana Suarez & Florencia Fiorentin & Mariano Pereira - 591-602 Centres of excellence in Latin America: how do these differ from other experiences?
by Pavel Gabriel - 603-618 From global climate goals to local practice—mission-oriented policy enactment in three Swedish regions
by Nancy Brett & Thomas Magnusson & Hans Andersson - 619-632 Evaluation of research proposals by peer review panels: broader panels for broader assessments?
by Rebecca Abma-Schouten & Joey Gijbels & Wendy Reijmerink & Ingeborg Meijer - 633-654 Barriers as moderators in the innovation process
by Diego R de & Nicholas S & André T - 655-669 The experimentation–accountability trade-off in innovation and industrial policy: are learning networks the solution?
by Slavo Radosevic & Despina Kanellou & George Tsekouras - 670-680 Policy entrepreneurs, entrepreneurial strategies, and institutional contexts in Interreg Europe
by Arnault Morisson & Evangelia Petridou - 681-694 Analysis of COVID-19 recovery and resilience policy in Finland: a transformative policy mix approach
by Paula Kivimaa & Jani Lukkarinen & David Lazarevic - 695-706 Disentangling the local context—imagined communities and researchers’ sense of belonging
by Serge P J M & Mads P Sørensen & Nick Allum & Abigail-Kate Reid - 707-718 Ideology, knowledge, and the assessment of science policy agencies
by Kathryn Haglin & Arnold Vedlitz - 719-741 Exploring indicators for monitoring sociotechnical system transitions through portfolio networks
by Caetano C R & Oscar Yandy & Cristian Matti - 742-748 Science diplomacy in the Global South—an introduction
by Derya Büyüktanir & Pierre-Bruno Ruffini - 742-753 Coloniality in science diplomacy—evidence from the Atlantic Ocean
by Andrei Polejack - 749-758 The globalization of science diplomacy in the early 1970s: a historical exploration
by Sam Robinson & Matthew Adamson & Gordon Barrett & Lif Lund & Simone Turchetti & Aya Homei & Péter Marton & Leah Aronowsky & Iqra Choudry & Johan Gärdebo & Jaehwan Hyun & Gerardo Ienna & Carringtone Kinyanjui & Beatriz Martínez-Rius & Júlia Mascarello & Doubravka Olsakova & Giulia Rispoli & Waqar Zaidi - 754-766 Scientific collaborations between Latin America and Europe: an approach from science diplomacy towards international engagement
by Luisa F & Aura Fossati & Nussaïbah B & Kleinsy Bonilla & Bernardo Urbani & Radenka Krsmanović & Tereza Vizinová - 771-781 Science diplomacy from a nation-state’s perspective: a general framing and its application to Global South countries
by Pierre-Bruno Ruffini & Olga Krasnyak - 782-793 Science diplomacy from the Global South: the case of intergovernmental science organizations
by Anna-Lena Rüland & Nicolas Rüffin & Katharina Cramer & Prosper Ngabonziza & Manoj Saxena & Stefan Skupien - 807-817 China’s use of formal science and technology agreements as a tool of diplomacy
by Caroline S Wagner & Denis F
2023, Volume 50, Issue 3
- 355-370 The promise of artificial intelligence in combating public corruption in the emerging economies: A conceptual framework
by Henry Adobor & Robert Yawson - 371-381 Online panel work through a gender lens: implications of digital peer review meetings
by Helen Peterson & Liisa Husu - 382-397 The role of intermediaries in nurturing innovation ecosystems: a case study of Singapore’s manufacturing sector
by Huey Yuen Ng & Yining Luo & Hyunkyu Park - 398-415 Missions as boundary objects for transformative change: understanding coordination across policy, research, and stakeholder communities
by Matthijs J Janssen & Joeri Wesseling & Jonas Torrens & K Matthias & Caetano Penna & Laurens Klerkx - 416-432 Chinese public university patents during 2006–20: a comprehensive investigation and comparative study
by Lin Zhang & Fan Qi & Ying Huang & Bart Van Looy & Lixin Chen & Ozcan Saritas - 433-444 Opportunity or responsibility? Tracing co-creation in the European policy discourse
by Anja K Ruess & Ruth Müller & Sebastian M Pfotenhauer - 445-456 European scholarly journals from small- and mid-size publishers: mapping journals and public funding mechanisms
by Mikael Laakso & Anna-Maija - 457-490 University–industry cooperation: a taxonomy of intermediaries
by Telmo N Santos & José G Dias & Sandro Mendonça - 491-508 A research on the effectiveness of innovation policy for regional innovation under Chinese long-range plan
by Boxu Yang & Xielin Liu & Yuchen Gao & Langmei Zhu - 509-520 Mission-oriented innovation policy as a hybridisation process: the case of transforming a national fertilising system
by Erkki-Jussi Nylén & Jan-Erik Johanson & Jarmo Vakkuri - 521-530 Open science–related policies in Europe
by Sh Moradi & S Abdi - 531-547 Competition, open innovation, and growth challenges in the semiconductor industry: the case of Europe’s clusters
by Robert Huggins & Andrew Johnston & Max Munday & Chen Xu - 548-558 Boundary work in the regional innovation policy mix: SME digital technology diffusion policies in Wales
by Dylan Henderson - 559-563 Perspectives on the narrowing and clustering of research trajectories: an epistemic threat to medical progress?
by Mark P Khurana & Emil Bargmann Madsen
2023, Volume 50, Issue 2
- 161-176 What governs attitudes toward artificial intelligence adoption and governance?
by Matthew R O’Shaughnessy & Daniel S Schiff & Lav R Varshney & Christopher J Rozell & Mark A Davenport - 177-193 The dynamics of policy coordination: The case of China’s science and technology policy-making
by Ying Huang & Yashan Li & Jinge Mao & Ruinan Li & Lin Zhang - 194-205 A legitimacy approach to social innovation initiatives at universities
by Letizia Donati & Caroline Wigren-Kristoferson - 206-218 Policy-making and evaluation of gender equality programmes: Context, power, and resistance in the transformation process
by Evanthia Kalpazidou Schmidt & Rachel Palmén & Susanne Bührer - 219-229 Making sense of transdisciplinarity: Interpreting science policy in a biotechnology centre
by Maria Bårdsen Hesjedal & Heidrun Åm - 230-242 Can innovation vouchers promote SMEs’ innovation in China: A flexible conditional difference-in-differences analysis
by Nini Xu & Junhua Guo - 243-252 Numeric work: The efforts of calculation actors to make numbers count in climate and energy policy
by Susanne Jørgensen & Knut H Sørensen - 253-274 Discussion on the entrepreneurial university in Spain: The case of the Madrid Region
by Natalia Dévora Quintero & Gonzalo León Serrano - 275-286 Does offensive patent insurance promote corporate innovation? Evidence from a quasi-experiment
by Ying Wu & Yi Zhang - 287-303 Coevolution between institutions and scientific organizations: The case of IMPA
by Renata Petrin & Roberto Gonzalez Duarte & Irene Kazumi Miura - 304-317 Gender mainstreaming research funding: a study of effects on STEM research proposals
by Karolin Sjöö & Wolfgang Kaltenbrunner - 318-335 Guidance on research integrity provided by pan-European discipline-specific learned societies: A scoping review
by Rosie Hastings & Krishma Labib & Iris Lechner & Lex Bouter & Guy Widdershoven & Natalie Evans - 336-349 Mission incomplete: Layered practices of monitoring and evaluation in Swedish transformative innovation policy
by Harald Rohracher & Lars Coenen & Olga Kordas - 350-353 Technology entrepreneurship and innovation hubs: Perspectives on the universal regulatory sandbox
by Thomas A Hemphill
2023, Volume 50, Issue 1
- 1-14 Balancing interests between freedom and censorship: Organizational strategies for quality assurance in science communication
by Benedikt Fecher & Freia Kuper & Birte Fähnrich & Hannah Schmid-Petri & Thomas Schildhauer & Peter Weingart & Holger Wormer - 15-29 A computational approach to study the gap and barriers between science and policy
by Nancy Li & Markus Luczak-Roesch & Flavia Donadelli - 30-41 ‘Unite behind the Science!’ Climate movements’ use of scientific evidence in narratives on socio-ecological futures
by Simone Rödder & Christopher Niklas - 42-58 The industry of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies in Brazil: Public policies as instruments of technology upgrading
by Renan G L & Bruno B & Paola R & Hillegonda M D - 59-71 Negotiating space for knowledge co-production
by Lisa Verwoerd & Hilde Brouwers & Eva Kunseler & Barbara Regeer & Evelien de Hoop - 72-86 Subsidy policies of a fresh supply chain considering the inputs of blockchain traceability service system
by Pan Liu & Xiaoyan Cui & Ye Li - 87-101 Policy seduction and governance resistance? Examining public funding agencies and academic institutions on decarbonisation research
by Abbas Abdul - 104-119 Prioritizing diversity? The allocation of US federal R&D funding
by Alexandra Graddy-Reed & Lauren Lanahan - 120-128 Environmental policy and R&D productivity: A case study from the Korean Emissions Trading Scheme
by Jung Youn - 129-132 Perspective on honest brokers in science: Broadening conflicts of interest and role academies could play
by Philippe C - 133-145 Fostering a research integrity culture: Actionable advice for institutions
by Steven De & Stijn Conix - 146-159 Co-creating end-user roles. Understanding the new variety of user involvement in public sector innovation
by Benjamin Lipp & Mathieu Baudrin & Carlos Cuevas-Garcia & Federica Pepponi & Magdalena Rozwadowska & Shelly Tsui
2022, Volume 49, Issue 6
- 819-829 Dynamics of expectations in the bioeconomy—Hopes, disillusionments, and conflicting futures
[Current Status of the Algae Production Industry in Europe: An Emerging Sector of the Blue Bioeconomy]
by Johanna Ahola-Launonen & Sofi Kurki - 830-842 Bridging climate change science and policy through TMNs in Turkey: CoM as a boundary-object
[Boundary Crossing and Boundary Objects’]
by Aslı Öğüt Erbil & Mehmet Eroğlu & Ebru Gönül Türk - 843-852 Public deliberation and the regulation of gene drive in the USA
[Emerging Sociotechnical Imaginaries for Gene Edited Crops for Foods in the United States: Implications for Governance]
by William F West & Leah W Buchman & Raul F Medina - 853-864 Why do Big Science projects exist? The role of social preferences
[A Positive Theory of Fiscal Deficits and Government Debt]
by Marco Vincenzi - 865-877 Embracing heterogeneity: Why plural understandings strengthen interdisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity
[Defining Interdisciplinary Research: Conclusions from a Critical Review of the Literature]
by Bianca Vienni-Baptista & Isabel Fletcher & Catherine Lyall & Christian Pohl - 878-889 An institutionalist perspective on smart specialization: Towards a political economy of regional innovation policy
[Place-based Policy and Politics]
by Maximilian Benner - 890-904 Strengthening the university third mission through building community capabilities alongside university capabilities
[In Search of a Developmental University: Community Engagement in Theory and Practice]
by Il-haam Petersen & Glenda Kruss & Nicole van Rheede - 905-914 Understanding why civil servants are reluctant to carry out transition tasks
[“Legitimation” and “development of positive Externalities”: Two Key Processes in the Formation Phase of Technological Innovation Systems]
by Rik B Braams & Joeri H Wesseling & Albert J Meijer & Marko P Hekkert - 915-927 Cooperative innovation and crises: Foreign subsidiaries, state-owned enterprises, and domestic private firms
[Directorship Interlocks in Comparative Perspective: The Case of Spain]
by Antonio García-Sánchez & Ruth Rama - 928-941 Anti-transparency within the EU shift to open science
[Impact of Open Science Methods and Practices on the Economics of Research and Science]
by Gustaf Nelhans & Jan NolinS - 942-950 Responding to a disease with resources from other diseases: Evidence from Zika vaccine research dynamics
[Protective Efficacy of Multiple Vaccine Platforms against Zika Virus Challenge in Rhesus Monkeys]
by Ohid Yaqub & Javier A Luna & Duncan Aq Moore & Alfredo Yegros-Yegros - 951-961 Clinical trial transparency regulations: Implications to various scholarly publishing stakeholders
[COVID-19 Study Retractions Drive Research Transparency Partnership and Push for Increased Publication of Negative/Null Findings]
by Habeeb Ibrahim Abdul Razack & Jesil Mathew Aranjani & Sam T Mathew - 962-971 Academics’ prosocial motivation for engagement with society: The case of German academics in health science
[Why Do Academics Engage Locally? Insights from the University of Stavanger]
by E Sormani & K Uude - 972-978 An assessment of the US Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program: A study of project failure
[On the Failure of Scientific Research: An Analysis of SBIR Projects Funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health]
by Albert N Link & Christopher A Swann & Martijn van Hasselt
2022, Volume 49, Issue 5
- 659-672 The design of transformative research and innovation policy instruments for grand challenges: The policy-nesting perspective
[Transformative Innovation Policy Approach to E-waste Management in Ghana: Perspectives of Actors on Transformative Changes]
by Susana Borrás & Sylvia Schwaag Serger - 673-685 Institutionalizing public engagement in research and innovation: Toward the construction of institutional entrepreneurial collectives
[Limits of Decentered Governance in Science-society Policies]
by Joshua B Cohen - 686-698 Assessment of success in university–industry cooperation literature: A bibliographic coupling analysis
[University-industry Relations and Research Group Production: Is There a Bidirectional Relationship?]
by Eva-María Mora-Valentín & Juan-José Nájera-Sánchez & Marta Ortiz-de-Urbina-Criado - 699-713 Experts and climate change politicisation. A case study of the Environmental Protection Agency (1983–2015)
[The Micro-Politics of Worthy Homelessness: Interactive Moments in Congressional Hearings]
by Loredana Loy - 714-727 The impacts of Centers for AIDS Research program and its enlargement on HIV/AIDS research collaboration
[A Timeline of HIV and AIDS]
by Ruiyao Xie & Chaocheng He & Shan Qiao & Xiaoming Li & Jiang Wu & Weiming Tang & Wentian Cui & Qingpeng Zhang - 728-738 Achieving societal and academic impacts of research: A comparison of networks, values, and strategies
[University Research Funding and Publication Performance - an International Comparison]
by Jonna Brenninkmeijer - 739-750 Peer effects of the young returnee scientists: Evidence from the state key laboratories in China
[Semiparametric Difference-in-Differences Estimators]
by Xi Yang & Xinlan Cai & Tingsong Li - 751-764 Supporting health researchers to realize meaningful patient involvement in research: Exploring researchers’ experiences and needs
[New Requirements for Patient and Public Involvement Statements in BMJ Open]
by Simone Harmsen & Carina A C M Pittens & Eva Vroonland & Annemiek J M L van Rensen & Jacqueline E W Broerse - 765-780 Disciplining interdisciplinarity: Infrastructure, identity, and interdisciplinary practice in nanoELSI research
[Interdisciplinary Promises versus Practices in Medicine: The Decoupled Experiences of Social Sciences and Humanities Scholars]
by Sharon Tsai-hsuan Ku & Stephen Zehr - 781-790 Working with curiosity: Knowledge transfer practitioners’ ambivalence at CERN
[Between Relevance and Excellence? Research Impact Agenda and the Production of Policy Knowledge]
by Chih-wei Yeh - 791-800 Can transparency undermine peer review? A simulation model of scientist behavior under open peer review
[Reviewing Peer Review]
by ederico Bianchi & Flaminio Squazzoni - 801-805 Perspective on research–policy interface as a partnership: The study of best practices in CREATE
[Bridging the Research-Practice Gap]
by Adriana Banozic-Tang & Araz Taeihagh - 806-817 Use of science in public policy: Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic efforts to ‘Follow the Science’
[Health-protective Behaviour, Social Media Usage and Conspiracy Belief during the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency]
by Barry Bozeman
2022, Volume 49, Issue 4
- 553-560 Economic incentive instruments and environmental innovation in China: Moderating effect of marketization
[Incentives for Environmental Self-regulation and Implications for Environmental Performance]
by Siying Long & Zhongju Liao - 561-572 Situated gender equality in regional research and innovation: Collaborative knowledge production
[Policies as Gendering Practices: Re-Viewing Categorical Distinctions]
by Marja Vehviläinen & Liekki Valaskivi - 573-579 The spatial distribution of public support for AI research
[Agglomeration and Productivity: Evidence from Firm-Level Data]
by Farhat Chowdhury & Albert N Link & Martijn van Hasselt - 580-582 Partial lottery can make grant allocation more fair, more efficient, and more diverse
[Mavericks and lotteries]
by Serge P J M Horbach & Joeri K Tijdink & Lex M Bouter - 583-597 Unboxing knowledge in collaboration between academia and society: A story about conceptions and epistemic uncertainty
[De-essentializing the Knowledge Intensive Firm: Reflections on Skeptical Research Going against the Mainstream]
by Anna Jonsson & Maria Grafström & Mikael Klintman - 598-608 Online platforms for research data: A requirements and cost analysis
[Petrel: A Programmatically Accessible Research Data Service]
by Rebecca Reichenbach & Christoph Eberl & Jörg Lindenmeier - 609-620 How universities influence societal impact practices: Academics’ sense-making of organizational impact strategies
[Between Relevance and Excellence? Research Impact Agenda and the Production of Policy Knowledge]
by Stefan P L de Jong & Corina Balaban - 621-631 The other side of the boundary: Productive interactions seen from the policy side
[Rethinking Policy ‘Impact’: Four Models of Research-Policy Relations]
by Silje Maria Tellmann & Magnus Gulbrandsen - 632-642 Factors enabling social impact: The importance of institutional entrepreneurship in social science research
[Institutional Entrepreneurship and Organizational Innovation: The Start-Up of a Divergent New Venture at the Periphery of a Mature Field]
by Emanuela Reale - 643-645 From ‘productive interactions’ to ‘enabling conditions’: The role of organizations in generating societal impact of academic research
[One Size Does Not Fit All! New Perspectives on the University in the Social Knowledge Economy]
by Stefan P L de Jong & Corina Balaban & Maria Nedeva - 646-658 Is renewable energy more favorable to diversity than conventional energy sources on R&D performance?
[Protecting Intellectual Property to Enhance Firm Performance: Does It Work for SMEs]
by Dohyoung Kim & Junseok Hwang
2022, Volume 49, Issue 3
- 365-377 Research funding randomly allocated? A survey of scientists’ views on peer review and lottery
by Axel Philipps - 378-381 Retraction in the online world—Shall we rethink the policy?
by Piotr Rzymski - 382-402 What is behind multiple institutional affiliations in academia?
by Hanna Hottenrott & Cornelia Lawson - 403-413 Evolution of the emergency drug innovation network and policy implications: Evidence from COVID-19 drug patents
by Qing Xia & Lanjian Liu & Xiaoping Li - 414-426 Designing a business intelligence system to support industry analysis and innovation policy
by Seonjae Lee & Daehyeon Lim & Youngsu Moon & Hoshin Lee & Sungjoo Lee - 427-440 Determinants of innovation and interactive learning in informal manufacturing enterprises in India
by K Chandra Shekar & K J Joseph - 441-459 How policies emerge and interact with each other? A bibliometric analysis of policies in China
by Chao Zhang & Jiancheng Guan - 460-473 A bibliometric study on the R&D funding and academic research performance in Shenzhen
by Yawen Zou - 474-487 Channels to shape procurement decision-making of public organisations for innovation through framework conditions
by Jing Liu & Xiaoling Kang & Xia Zhang & Xing Chen - 488-498 On the boundary of services and research collaborations in Japanese state-of-the-art academic research infrastructures
by Takashi Onoda & Yasunobu Ito - 499-517 Democratic and expert legitimacy: Science, politics and the public during the COVID-19 pandemic
by Peter Weingart & François van Schalkwyk & Lars Guenther - 518-531 What counts: Making sense of metrics of research value
by Kate Williams - 532-551 Are there political cycles hidden inside collaborative innovation efficiency? An empirical study based on Chinese cities
by Fei Fan & Xuerong Zhang & Xueli Wang
2022, Volume 49, Issue 2
- 159-167 The role of Universities in Transformative Innovation Policy
[Living Lab: An Open and Citizen-centric Approach for Innovation]
by Rachel Parker & Petra Lundgren - 168-178 Impacts for whom? Assessing inequalities in NSF-funded broader impacts using the Inclusion-Immediacy Criterion
[The Role of Governance in Mobile Phones for Inclusive Human Development in Sub-Saharan Africa]
by Thomas Woodson & Sophia Boutilier - 179-190 Systems of innovation, diversification, and the R&D trap: A case study of Kuwait
[Building Technological Capability in the Less Developed Countries: The Role of a National System of Innovation]
by Husam Arman & Simona Iammarino & J Eduardo Ibarra-Olivo & Neil Lee - 191-200 Taking the pulse of science diplomacy and developing practices of valuation
[The Perverse Effects of Competition on Scientists’ Work and Relationships]
by Tim Flink - 201-218 What motivates academics for external engagement? Exploring the effects of motivational drivers and organizational fairness
[The Nature of Academic Entrepreneurship in the UK: Widening the Focus on Entrepreneurial Activities]
by Kwadwo Atta-Owusu & Rune Dahl Fitjar - 219-245 Capturing the invisible. Sociotechnical imaginaries of energy. The critical overview
[School of Social Sciences Working Papers Series, vol. 67. Cardiff: Cardiff University]
by Tadeusz Józef Rudek - 246-266 Education and training policies for research integrity: Insights from a focus group study
[Research Integrity is Much More than Misconduct]
by Krishma Labib & Natalie Evans & Rea Roje & Panagiotis Kavouras & Andrea Reyes Elizondo & Wolfgang Kaltenbrunner & Ivan Buljan & Tine Ravn & Guy Widdershoven & Lex Bouter & Costas Charitidis & Mads P Sørensen & Joeri Tijdink - 267-267 Erratum to: Restoring the antibiotic R&D market to combat the resistance crisis
by Lucas Böttcher & Didier Wernli & Hans Gersbach - 268-288 Making university and industry research collaboration: Evidence from co-inventions in Japan
[Endogenous Matching and the Empirical Determinants of Contract Form]
by Junichi Nishimura & Sadao Nagaoka & Shinichi Akaike & Mitsuaki Hosono - 289-301 Deconstructing impact: A framework for impact evaluation in grant applications
[Evidencing Impact from Art Research: Analysis of Impact Case Studies from the REF 2014]
by Lai Ma & Rachael Agnew - 302-312 Individual attributes and inventors matching: A study using data from the Brazilian co-patents network
[Scientific Teams and Institutional Collaborations: Evidence from US Universities, 1981–1999]
by Alexandre Mejdalani & Eduardo Gonçalves - 313-323 Assessing broader impacts of funded research: the US National Science Foundation v. Lamar Smith
[What is Societal Impact of Research and How Can it Be Assessed? A Literature Survey]
by Caitlin Drummond Otten & Baruch Fischhoff - 324-346 Walking the talk? Innovation policy approaches to unleash the transformative potentials of the Nordic bioeconomy
[Derfor har vi brug for en national bioøkonomistrategi. By the Danish Agriculture & Food Council, The Danish society for Nature Conservation, Novozymes and the partnership for Sustainable Biorefining]
by Lisa Scordato & Markus M Bugge & Teis Hansen & Anne Tanner & Olav Wicken - 347-364 Local political turnover, R&D investment leap and corporate innovation performance: Evidence from China
[Connecting the Dots: Bringing External Corporate Governance into the Corporate Governance Puzzle]
by Zhenyu Jiang & Zongjun Wang & Chengxiao Feng & Lin Yi
2022, Volume 49, Issue 1
- 1-17 Role of professional autonomy and project commitment in the Korean government–funded R&D projects
[R&D Work Climate and Innovation in Semiconductors]
by Seung Chul Baek & Duk Hee Lee - 18-27 The promise of the Maker Movement: policy expectations versus community criticisms
[Self-Help, Social Work and Empowerment]
by Federico Ferretti & Harro van Lente - 28-41 Canada’s changing innovation landscape
[Does Technological Diversification Spur University Patenting?]
by Md. Razib Alam & Bonwoo Koo & Brian Paul Cozzarin - 42-53 Cyborg ethics and regulation: ethical issues of human enhancement
[The Consequences for Human Beings of Creating Ethical Robots]
by Liza Ireni-Saban & Maya Sherman - 54-71 A comparative analysis of innovation policies in Hong Kong and Shenzhen within the Greater Bay Area initiative
[Constructing Regional Advantage: Platform Policies Based on Related Variety and Differentiated Knowledge Bases]
by Naubahar Sharif & Kevin Chandra - 72-84 Knowledge networks in Brazil’s health sciences
[As especificidades do sistema de inovação do setor saúde]
by Ana Lúcia Tatsch & Janaina Ruffoni & Marisa dos Reis A Botelho & Rafael Stefani - 85-97 Researchers’ institutional mobility: bibliometric evidence on academic inbreeding and internationalization
[Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC)]
by Vít Macháček & Martin Srholec & Márcia R Ferreira & Nicolas Robinson-Garcia & Rodrigo Costas - 98-114 Technological structure network analysis to explore the hotspots of academic patents in international technology transfer
[Technology Transfer through Imports]
by Shu-Hao Chang - 115-126 An evidence-based culture: COVID-19 positivity factors during the asymptomatic occurrence in Jakarta, lndonesia
[Application of Bayesian Logistic Regression to Mining Biomedical Data]
by Bahrul Ilmi Nasution & Yudhistira Nugraha & Andi Sulasikin & Hansen Wiguna & Juan Intan Kanggrawan & Alex Lukmanto Suherman & Ngabila Salama & Dwi Oktavia - 127-131 Restoring the antibiotic R&D market to combat the resistance crisis
[21 U.S. Code § 360bb—Designation of Drugs for Rare Diseases or Conditions]
by Lucas Böttcher & Hans Gersbach & Didier Wernli