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MIT and the Rise of Entrepreneurial Science is a timely and authoritative book that analyses the transformation of the university's role in society as an expanded one involving economic and social development as well as teaching and research. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology invented the format for university-industry relations that has been copied all over America and latterly the rest of the world. This excellent book shows that the ground-breaking university-industry-government interactions have become one of the foundations of modern successful economies.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: MIT and the rise of the entrepreneurial university
1. The second academic revolution
2. MIT: The funding of an entrepreneurial university
3. Controversy over consultation
4. The traffic among MIT, industry and the military
5. Knowledge as property: the debate over patenting academic science
6. The regulation of academic patenting
7. Enterprises from science: the origins of science-based regional economic development
8. The invention of the venture capital firm: American Research and Development (ARD)
9. Stanford and Silicon Valley: the enhancement of the MIT model
10. Technology transfer universalized: the Bayh-Dole regime
11. The making of entrepreneurial scientists
12. Innovation: the endless transition
Notes
Index
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MIT and the Rise of Entrepreneurial Science is a timely and authoritative book that analyses the transformation of the university's role in society as an expanded one involving economic and social development as well as teaching and research. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology invented the format for university-industry relations that has been copied all over America and latterly the rest of the world. This excellent book shows that the ground-breaking university-industry-government interactions have become one of the foundations of modern successful economies.
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: MIT and the rise of the entrepreneurial university
1. The second academic revolution
2. MIT: The funding of an entrepreneurial university
3. Controversy over consultation
4. The traffic among MIT, industry and the military
5. Knowledge as property: the debate over patenting academic science
6. The regulation of academic patenting
7. Enterprises from science: the origins of science-based regional economic development
8. The invention of the venture capital firm: American Research and Development (ARD)
9. Stanford and Silicon Valley: the enhancement of the MIT model
10. Technology transfer universalized: the Bayh-Dole regime
11. The making of entrepreneurial scientists
12. Innovation: the endless transition
Notes
Index
Atsiliepimai