Cooperative Research Centres (CRCs) in Australia are underpinned by funding from the Australian Government. Among their many goals, they are intended to lead to long-term sustainable relationships between industry and academic institutions without the need for further public funding. Yet concerns have been raised in various reports and reviews about the ability of CRCs to achieve sustainable collaboration beyond their initial seven-year life, despite the general observation that CRCs have proved beneficial to the broader Australian community and the economy in general. This study adduces Transaction Cost Theory to determine the impediments to long-term sustainable collaboration between industry and academia. It does so by examining relation...
Australian government policy aims to exploit university–industry research collaboration to transform...
Currently, in the process of creating innovation, some new forms of R & D collaboration are emerging...
It is critical that the third sector research community develop valid comparable baseline data on a ...
Cooperative Research Centres (CRCs) in Australia are underpinned by funding from the Australian Gove...
In this article we trace changes in the institutional and social dynamics that have steered cross-se...
International evidence shows that research is increasingly being carried out in organisational forms...
The article focuses on the Cooperative Research Centers (CRC) Program which was established in 1990 ...
Cooperative research centres are a well-established organisational embodiment of the 'triple helix'....
This chapter contribution to the edited volume addresses the growing interest among science policy r...
The present study was commissioned by the Australian Research Council (ARC) and the Department of Ed...
Preliminary findings from a 2005 survey of Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) project leaders are pre...
The Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) program has been one of the flagship programs of Australia’s N...
Research of potential socio-economic value is commonly conducted within cross-sector (government, u...
A key feature of government interventions in support of national innovation in recent decades has be...
The Cooperative Research Centres are hybrid organizations at the leading edge of change in Australia...
Australian government policy aims to exploit university–industry research collaboration to transform...
Currently, in the process of creating innovation, some new forms of R & D collaboration are emerging...
It is critical that the third sector research community develop valid comparable baseline data on a ...
Cooperative Research Centres (CRCs) in Australia are underpinned by funding from the Australian Gove...
In this article we trace changes in the institutional and social dynamics that have steered cross-se...
International evidence shows that research is increasingly being carried out in organisational forms...
The article focuses on the Cooperative Research Centers (CRC) Program which was established in 1990 ...
Cooperative research centres are a well-established organisational embodiment of the 'triple helix'....
This chapter contribution to the edited volume addresses the growing interest among science policy r...
The present study was commissioned by the Australian Research Council (ARC) and the Department of Ed...
Preliminary findings from a 2005 survey of Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) project leaders are pre...
The Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) program has been one of the flagship programs of Australia’s N...
Research of potential socio-economic value is commonly conducted within cross-sector (government, u...
A key feature of government interventions in support of national innovation in recent decades has be...
The Cooperative Research Centres are hybrid organizations at the leading edge of change in Australia...
Australian government policy aims to exploit university–industry research collaboration to transform...
Currently, in the process of creating innovation, some new forms of R & D collaboration are emerging...
It is critical that the third sector research community develop valid comparable baseline data on a ...