The Emergence of Technopolis: Knowledge-Intensive Technologies and Regional DevelopmentBloomsbury Academic, 1992. gada 30. maijs - 200 lappuses This study examines the rise of the technopolis--high technology-based regional development. It explores how and why these regions emerged and the policies that have been devised to promote them. The rapid, propulsive growth of the technopolis in the 1960s and 1970s caught many people by surprise. Silicon Valley arose in an agricultural area; Route 128 in a stagnant manufacturing region. Throughout the rest of the world, a new generation of regional development policies have appeared, the most common ones being science parks, small business incubators, and venture capital funds. This book surveys these policies from a comparative, critical perspective. It also develops a theoretical framework for understanding why regional high-technology development occurs and the role policy can play in the process. |
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1.–3. rezultāts no 9.
... Frederick Terman at Stanford University , and William Barton Rogers and the university presidents who followed him at MIT . The development of these institutions , when traced to their origins , does seem to have a certain happenstance ...
... Frederick Terman's brainchild , Stanford Industrial Park . In 1951 , Terman , working with university President Wallace Sterling , developed a plan for what would be the first science park in the world . Stanford Industrial Park was a ...
... Terman's contribution to the development of Silicon Valley was vital . Hall and Markusen write that " to an extraordinary degree , Silicon Valley resulted from the drive and imagination of one man : Frederick Terman " ( 1985 , p . viii ) ...
Saturs
Technopolis Policies | 11 |
The Technopolis and Regional Development | 31 |
Evaluating Technopolis Policies | 73 |
Autortiesības | |
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The Emergence of Technopolis: Knowledge-Intensive Technologies and Regional ... Robert Preer Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 1992 |