bookOxford University Press eBooksSep 2, 2009Closed access

Innovation: A Guide to the Literature

University of Oslo

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Abstract

Abstract Innovation is not a new phenomenon. Arguably, it is as old as mankind itself. There seems to be something inherently “human” about the tendency to think about new and better ways of doing things and to try them out in practice. In spite of its obvious importance, innovation has not always received the scholarly attention it deserves. For instance, students of long-run economic change used to focus on factors such as capital accumulation or the working of markets, rather than on innovation. This is now changing. Research on the role of innovation in economic and social change has proliferated in recent years, particularly within the social sciences, and with a bent towards cross-disciplinarity. In…

Citation impact

970
total citations
FWCI
721.42
Percentile
100%
References
70
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Computer science
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Industry, innovation and infrastructure
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