Skip to main content

Currently Skimming:

A. Contributing Authors
Pages 229-233

The Chapter Skim interface presents what we've algorithmically identified as the most significant single chunk of text within every page in the chapter.
Select key terms on the right to highlight them within pages of the chapter.


From page 229...
... government, including posts as Assistant for International Economic Affairs at the National Security Council and Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs. He also served as an international economist at the State Department and as a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, the Brookings Institution, and as a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
From page 230...
... JOHN CANTVVELL is Reader in International Economics at the University of Reading and has been a visiting professor at the University of Rome "La Sapienza" and the University of Social Sciences, Toulouse. His main research areas are the economics of technological change and international production, and he is currently directing an Economic and Social Research Council project on the historical structure of innovative activity in the United Kingdom, Europe, and the United States.
From page 231...
... . She was a foreign research associate at the University of Tokyo, taught courses at the University of Washington and George Washington University, and served as project director at the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment prior to joining the National Research Council staff.
From page 232...
... Luce Professor of International Political Economy at Columbia University, where his main fields of research include general economics, industrial organization, domestic monetary and fiscal theory and policy. Earlier, he held faculty positions of assistant and associate professor at Oberlin College and Carnegie Technology University and, most recently, was Director of the Institute of Social Policy at Yale University.
From page 233...
... Teece was associate professor of economics at the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University. Having a strong interest in innovation, technology strategy, science and technology policy, and antitrust, he has written extensively on industrial organization, corporate strategy, and public policy.


This material may be derived from roughly machine-read images, and so is provided only to facilitate research.
More information on Chapter Skim is available.