The productivity and competitiveness of local firms in non‐OECD countries depends as much on technological capacities and successful upgrading as in industrialized countries. However, developing countries undertake very little to no original R&D and primarily depend on foreign technology. Long‐term contracts and subcontracting arrangements within global value chains are here very important forms of transnational cooperation and therefore also important channels for technology transfer, especially as the majority of these countries attract only limited foreign direct investment. Drawing on innovation and growth models as much as on value‐chain literature, we outline an analytical model for empirical research on local firm u...
How can weaker states influence stronger ones? This article offers a case study of one recent exerci...
The paper tries to shed light on the conceptual link between international crises like the one follo...
Natural resources are often held responsible for intrastate conflicts. As a consequence, both nation...
Various concepts ascribe key roles to emerging non‐OECD countries in regional and global polit...
Although primary industries are important to developing countries, they have been largely unable to ...
The literature on institutional determinants of intra‐state violence commonly asserts that the...
The paper tries to shed light on the conceptual link between international crises like the one follo...
This paper argues that trade and capital account reforms within autocracies underlie the primacy of ...
South America’s security agenda demands the simultaneous management of domestic crises, interstate c...
This paper builds on institutional analysis to generate new conclusions about the economic viability...
According to quantitative studies, oil is the only resource that is robustly linked to civil war ons...
In post‐conflict societies, security is provided by a broad range of actors including the stat...
Seit einiger Zeit stehen Regionen (wieder) auf der Agenda der Theoriediskussionen in den Internation...
Given the importance of the assertion or prevention of regional leadership for the future global ord...
While in an initial legal and academic anti-corruption wave corruption itself was at the center of a...
How can weaker states influence stronger ones? This article offers a case study of one recent exerci...
The paper tries to shed light on the conceptual link between international crises like the one follo...
Natural resources are often held responsible for intrastate conflicts. As a consequence, both nation...
Various concepts ascribe key roles to emerging non‐OECD countries in regional and global polit...
Although primary industries are important to developing countries, they have been largely unable to ...
The literature on institutional determinants of intra‐state violence commonly asserts that the...
The paper tries to shed light on the conceptual link between international crises like the one follo...
This paper argues that trade and capital account reforms within autocracies underlie the primacy of ...
South America’s security agenda demands the simultaneous management of domestic crises, interstate c...
This paper builds on institutional analysis to generate new conclusions about the economic viability...
According to quantitative studies, oil is the only resource that is robustly linked to civil war ons...
In post‐conflict societies, security is provided by a broad range of actors including the stat...
Seit einiger Zeit stehen Regionen (wieder) auf der Agenda der Theoriediskussionen in den Internation...
Given the importance of the assertion or prevention of regional leadership for the future global ord...
While in an initial legal and academic anti-corruption wave corruption itself was at the center of a...
How can weaker states influence stronger ones? This article offers a case study of one recent exerci...
The paper tries to shed light on the conceptual link between international crises like the one follo...
Natural resources are often held responsible for intrastate conflicts. As a consequence, both nation...