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*Call for papers*

Workshop

What do we know and what should we know about international knowledge
sourcing?



*12-13 June 2015*

Department of Political and Social Science

University of Catania (ITALY)



*Full paper submission February 28, 2015*



International knowledge sourcing has for a long period of time been a hot
topic in the innovation studies literature. Scholars in this tradition
initially debated on the magnitude of this phenomenon (Cantwell 1995
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_5>; Patel & Pavitt 1991
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_16>), while converging on the idea that
international knowledge sourcing is a “North-North” phenomenon with R&D FDI
departing from advanced countries and targeting other advanced countries (see
e.g., Arvanitis & Hollenstein 2011 <#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_2>; Cantwell &
Piscitello 2000 <#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_7>). As a result, the hierarchy
of foreign R&D locations concerns mainly advanced country locations (Cantwell
& Janne 1999 <#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_6>; Patel & Vega 1999
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_17>), which are ranked on the ground of
technology- and R&D activity-specific advantages (Dunning & Narula 1995
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_11>; Florida 1997
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_13>; Pearce
& Papanastassiou 1999 <#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_18>). Innovation studies
research has also suggested that R&D internationalization increasingly aims
at sourcing knowledge abroad in order to complement and enhance knowledge
production at home (Almeida 1996 <#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_1>; Cantwell &
Santangelo 2000 <#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_8>).

However, the most recent statistics and an increasing number of studies
paint a “North-South” as well as a “South-North” picture of the phenomenon
challenging the stylized facts that research on international knowledge
sourcing has traditionally documented. Emerging economies are nowadays
major host locations of R&D offshoring. R&D FDI departs from advanced
countries and target primarily emerging economies, which are now top-ranked
in the hierarchy of foreign R&D locations (Contractor et al. 2010
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_9>; D'Agostino et al. 2013
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_10>; UNCTAD 2005 <#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_19>).
A parallel increasing pattern is the offshoring of R&D by firms originating
in emerging economies and targeting advanced countries (UNCTAD 2005
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_19>; Von Zedtwitz 2006
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_20>). Thus, the emergence of new locations and
players has transformed knowledge sourcing from a cross-border to a truly
global phenomenon.

 These recent developments raise questions related to the effective
possibility of “traditional” actors to source knowledge at
“non-traditional” locations as well as the effective capability of
“non-traditional” actors to source knowledge in “traditional” locations.
Although emerging economies are experiencing an upgrading of technological
capabilities and enjoy a large availability of talents (Athreye & Cantwell
2007 <#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_3>; Lewin et al. 2009
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_14>), yet, the ability of these new locations to
develop state-of-the-art knowledge remains open to debate (von Zedtwitz &
Gassmann 2002 <#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_21>). Specifically, a critical
issue concerns the type of knowledge and R&D activities that are more
likely to be sourced and located in emerging economies, and the new
international division of labor in knowledge production that has emerged as
a consequence (Fifarek & Veloso 2010 <#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_12>). The
fact that recent statistics on R&D internationalization have documented
document a growing involvement of emerging economies as host locations of
R&D FDI has raised great interest (Moncada-Paternò-Castello et al. 2011
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_15>), but the phenomenon is not fully understood
at this point in time. Likewise, there is some evidence that firms located
in fast-growing emerging economies perform FDI in developed economies with
a technology-seeking intent (Athreye & Kapur 2009
<#14b1ad6dcb42133b__ENREF_4>). Also this phenomenon is not fully understood
from theoretical and empirical points of view.



The focus is on emerging economies as host locations of R&D offshoring
departing from advanced locations as well as home locations of R&D
offshoring targeting advanced countries. Theoretical and empirical
arguments motivate this choice. Whether international knowledge sourcing
follows a “North-South” (“Northern” firms investing in the “South”) or a
“South-North” (“Southern” firms investing in the “North”) pattern, these
perspectives represent two sides of the same coin and both challenge our
current knowledge of the phenomenon.



Both theoretical and empirical contributions, which draw on different
theoretical streams, adopt diverse empirical approaches, and apply a single
or multi-level analysis, are welcomed. Possible topics and research
questions would include, but would not be limited to, the following list:




   -       The most recent statistics document that emerging economies are
   now top-ranked in the hierarchy of foreign R&D locations. But can firms
   from developed countries effectively source knowledge in “non-traditional”
   locations? What is the effect of R&D investments in these locations on the
   investors’ performance?
   -         Recent research points out to a new international division of
   labor in knowledge production challenging the “North-North” pattern
   traditionally characterizing the knowledge sourcing phenomenon. What type
   of knowledge and R&D activities should be strategically outsourced and what
   type kept at home? What are the interaction mechanisms between offshored
   and home-base R&D activities? How do such mechanisms affect performance?
   -       Emerging economies have experienced an upgrading of
   technological capabilities and enjoy a large availability of talents, but
   are actors in these locations able to develop state-of-the-art technology?
   -         Recent statistics on R&D internationalization document a
   growing involvement of emerging economies as home locations of R&D FDI.
   What type of knowledge are emerging markets firms able to effectively
   source in developed countries—and for what purposes?



*Keynote Speaker*

*Maryann Feldman* (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA)



This is a launching workshop of an *Industrial and Corporate Change*
Special Issue Session. The workshop will provide an opportunity for
intensive discussion and dialogue on the topic. Papers presented at the
workshop may be considered for publication in the Special Issue
Section of *Industrial
and Corporate Change*. Acceptance to the workshop does not grant acceptance
to the Special Issue Section.



Perspective participants are requested to submit a full paper to
[log in to unmask] by *February 28, 2015* and will be notified by *April 10,
2015*. The workshop will host about 20 papers. Participation to the
workshop is limited to presenting authors, who may be asked to act as
discussants. There may be limited space for scholars interested in
attending as general participants.



There is no participation fee, but participants are requested to cover
their own travel and accommodation.



*Schedule*

*28 February 2015*: Submission deadline

*10 April 2015: *Notification to authors

*25 April 2015:* Required registration

*12 May 2015*: Workshop program online

*12-13 June 2015:* Workshop in Catania



*Organizing and Scientific Committee *

*Keld Laursen*, Department of Innovation and Organizational Economics,
Copenhagen Business School

*Lorena D’Agostino*, Department of Political and Social Studies, University
of Catania, Italy

*Daniela Maggioni*, Department of Political and Social Science, University
of Catania, Italy

*Grazia D. Santangelo*, Department of Political and Social Studies,
University of Catania, Italy



Further info are available at http://www.dsps.unict.it/IB4EU/ICCWorkshop




Professor Grazia Santangelo
Jean Monnet Chair International Business for European Union (IB4EU)
Department of Political and Social Science
University of Catania
Via Vittorio Emanuele II, 8
95131 Catania
ITALY
http://www.dsps.unict.it/content/scheda-docente?cf=U05UR1pENzNBNDlHMzcxSA==


<http://www.dsps.unict.it/IB4EU/en>

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