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Informationen zum Autor Arie Y. Lewin is Professor Emeritus of Strategy and International Business at Duke University, North Carolina and Editor-in-Chief of the journal Management and Organization Review. His research focuses on organization adaption and renewal, co-evolution, and the globalization of innovation. Martin Kenney is a Professor at the University of California, Davis and Senior Project Director at the Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy. His research focuses upon entrepreneurship, venture capital, innovation and university-industry relations in Silicon Valley and East Asia. Johann Peter Murmann is Professor of Strategic Management at the Australian Graduate School of Management, part of the University of New South Wales Business School. He is a senior editor of the journal Management and Organization Review. His research focuses on the role of innovation in the development of industries. Klappentext This book argues that China must become an innovation-based economy to avoid the middle-income traps, and examines both the opportunities and challenges in meeting this goal. Zusammenfassung To overcome the middle-income trap! China must develop the capacity for innovation. This book brings together leading Chinese and other international scholars to examine the key areas shaping China's opportunities and challenges if it is to become an innovation-based economy. It will appeal to scholars! policy-makers! and business practitioners. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. China's innovation challenge: an introduction Arie Y. Lewin, Martin Kenney and Johann Peter Murmann; 2. New structural economies: the future of the Chinese economy Justin Yifu Lin; 3. Impact of China's invisible societal forces on its intended evolution Gordon Redding; 4. The road ahead for China: implications from South Korea's experience Michael A. Witt; 5. Innovation and technological specialization of Chinese industry Keun Lee; 6. China's political economy: prospects for technological innovation-based growth Douglas Fuller; 7. Transforming China's IP system to stimulate innovation Menita Liu Cheng and Can Huang; 8. Building the innovation capacity of SMEs in China John Child; 9. Who benefits when MNEs partner with local enterprises in China? Simon Collinson; 10. Advantages and challenges of Chinese MNEs in global competition Yves Doz and Keeley Wilson; 11. Emerging trends in global sourcing of innovation Silvia Massini, Keren Crispin-Wagner and Eliza Chilimoniuk-Przezdziecka; 12. Why is China failing to leapfrog India's IT outsourcing industry? Weidong Xia, Mary Ann Von Glinow and Yingxia Lia; 13. Barriers to organizational creativity in Chinese firms Zhi-Xue Zhang and Weiguo Zhong; 14. Institutional and cultural contexts of creativity and innovation in China Chi-Yue Chiu, Shyhnan Liou and Letty Y-Y. Kwan; 15. Reframing basis for cross-cultural management Rosalie L. Tung; 16. China's innovation challenge: concluding reflections Arie Y. Lewin, Martin Kenney and Johann Peter Murmann....