Resources This book is available in Oxford Scholarship Online - view abstracts and keywords at book and chapter level.
Related Categories
|
Also Recommended
|
|
|
Creating and Sustaining Competitive Advantage
Jay B. Barney, Delwyn N. Clark
£30.00
|
|
|
|
|
Joseph L. Bower, Clark G. Gilbert
£32.50
|
|
|
|
|
Competition, Competitive Advantage, and Clusters
The Ideas of Michael Porter
Edited by Robert Huggins and Hiro Izushi
336 pages
|
234x156mm
978-0-19-957803-0
|
Hardback
|
31 March 2011
|
|
|
|
|
- Comprehensive coverage of all apsects of Michael Porter's works - strategy, international business, competitiveness
- Contributions from leading authorities across the disciplines
- Editors interviewed Michael Porter
Harvard professor, Michael Porter has been one of the most influential figures in strategic management research over the last three decades. He infused a rigorous theoretical framework of industrial organization economics with the then still embryonic field of strategic management and elevated it to its current status as an academic discipline. Porter's outstanding career is also characterized by its cross-disciplinary nature. Following his most important work on strategic management, he then made a leap to the policy side and dealt with a completely different set of analytical units. More recently he has made a foray into inner city development, environmental regulations, and
health care services. Throughout these explorations Porter has maintained his integrative approach, seeking a road that links management case studies and the general model building of mainstream economics.
With expert contributors from a range of disciplines including strategic management, economic development, economic geography, and planning, this book assesses the contribution Michael Porter has made to these respective disciplines. It clarifies the sources of tension and controversy relating to all the major strands of Porter's work, and provides academics, students, and practitioners with a critical guide for the application of Porter's models. The book highlights that while many of the criticisms of Porter's ideas are valid, they are almost an inevitable
outcome for a scholar who has sought to build bridges across wide disciplinary valleys. His work has provided others with a set of frameworks to explore in more depth the nature of competition, competitive advantage, and clusters from a range of vantage points.Readership: Academics, researchers, and students in business and management, business managers, and policy makers
|
|
|
Edited by Robert Huggins, Director, Centre for International Competitiveness, Cardiff School of Management, University of Cardiff, and Hiro Izushi, Senior Lecturer in Innovation, Economics and Strategy Group, Aston Business School Contributors: Robert Huggins, Cardiff School of Management, University of Cardiff Hiro Izushi, Aston Business School Jay B. Barney, Ohio State University J.-C. Spender, Lund/ESADE Nicolai J. Foss, Copenhagen Business School Robert E. Hoskisson, Arizona State University Michael A. Hitt, Texas A&M University William P.
Wan, Texas Tech University Daphne Yiu, Chinese University of Hong Kong Omar Aktouf, HEC Montréal Miloud Chennoufi, Canadian Forces College W. David Holford, University of Québec at Montréal Robert M. Grant, Bocconi University Jan Fagerberg, University of Oslo Brian Snowdon, Durham University Christian H. M. Ketels, Harvard Business School Edward J. Malecki, the Ohio State University Ron Martin, University of Cambridge Peter Sunley, University of Southampton
|
|
|
1: Robert Huggins and Hiro Izushi: Introduction
Part I
2: Jay B. Barney: Establishing Strategic Management as an Academic Discipline
3: J.-C. Spender: Why Competitive Strategy succeeds - and with whom
4: Nicolai J. Foss: Eclecticism and the Evolution of Strategy Research
5: Robert E. Hoskisson, Michael A. Hitt, William P. Wan, and Daphne Yiu: Antecedents and Precedents to Porter's Competitive Strategy
6: Omar Aktouf, Miloud Chennoufi, and W. David Holford: The Strategic Management Framework: a Methodological and Epistemological Examination
Part II
7: Robert M. Grant: National Economic Development and the Competitive Advantage of Nations
8: Jan Fagerberg: Domestic Demand, Learning, and the Competitive Advantage of Nations: an Empirical Analysis
9: Brian Snowdon: The Growth and Competitiveness of Nations: the Contribution of Michael Porter
Part III
10: Christian H. M. Ketels: Clusters and Competitiveness: Porter's Contribution
11: Edward J. Malecki: On Diamonds, Clusters, and Regional Development
12: Ron Martin and Peter Sunley: Clusters, Evolutionary Economics, and Policymaking
13: Robert Huggins and Hiro Izushi: Conclusion
|
|
|
|
The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
|
|