Reference: | 1. Arnold, E., Rush, H., Bessant, J., and Hobday, M. (1998). “Strategic planning in research and technology institutes”. R&D Management, Vol.28, No.2. 89-100. 2. Breznitz, D. (2007). Innovation and the State: political choice and strategies for growth in Israel, Taiwan, and Ireland. New Haven: Yale University Press. 3. Castells, M. (2000). The rise of the network society. Chichester: Blackwell Publishing. 4. Chang, P-L. and Hsu, C-W. (1998). “The development strategies for Taiwan’s semiconductor industry”. IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management, Vol.45, No.4. 349-356. 5. Chang, P-L., Hsu C-W., and Tsai C-T. (1999). “A stage approach for industrial technology development and implementation – the case of Taiwan’s computer industry”. Technovation, Vol.19. 233-241. 6. Chen, C-Y., Lin, Y-L., and Chu, P-Y. (2013). “Facilitators of national innovation policy in a SME-dominated country: a case study of Taiwan”. Innovation: Management, Policy & Practice, Vol.15, No.4. 405-415. 7. Chen, J-H. and Chen Y-J. (2016). “The evolution of public industry R&D institute – the case of ITRI”. R&D Management, Vol.46, No.1. 49-61. 8. GIO. (2001). “President’s address at the closing ceremony of the Economic Development Advisory Conference”. Government Information Office (GIO), ROC (Taiwan), August 26. 9. Cheng, L-P. (2010). “Evaluation of science and technology policy mechanism with decision support system: the case of Taiwan”. The paper presented at the European Evaluation Society Conference, Prague, October 6-8. 10. Cheng, B-S. (2006). “Dragon appearing in the field: the legend of the semiconductor industry in Taiwan”. In The Silicon Dragon: High-Tech Industry in Taiwan. Tsai, T. and Cheng, B-S. (eds.). Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing. 1-26. 11. Chu, Y-P. (2006). “The political economy of Taiwan’s high-tech industrialization: the “developmental state” and its mutinous mutation”. In The East Asian High-Tech Drive. Chu, Y-P. (ed.). Cheltenham: Edvard Elgar Publishing. 117-178. 12. Crow, M. and Bozeman, B. (1998). Limited by Design: R&D laboratories in the U.S. National Innovation System. NY: Columbia University Press. 13. Dahlman, C. and Sananikone, O. (1997). “Taiwan, China: Policies and Institutions for Rapid Growth”. In Lessons from East Asia. Liepziger, D. (ed.). Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. 83-154. 14. DGBAS. (2009). Statistical Abstract of National Income. Directorate-General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics (DGBAS), Executive Yuan, Taiwan (ROC). 15. DGBAS. (2011). Industry and Service Census. Directorate-General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics (DGBAS), Executive Yuan, Taiwan (ROC). 16. DGBAS. (2014). Statistical Yearbook of the Republic of China. Directorate-General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics (DGBAS), Executive Yuan, Taiwan (ROC). 17. Diederen, P. et al. (ed.) (1999). Innovation and research policies: an international comparative analysis. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing. 18. Dodgson, M. and Bessant, J. (1996). Effective Innovation Policy: A New Approach. London: International Thomson Business Press. 19. Dodgson, M. et al. (2008). “The evolving nature of Taiwan’s national innovation system: The case of biotechnology innovation networks.” Research Policy, Vol.37. 430-445. 20. Fransman, M. (2010). The new ICT ecosystem: implications for policy and regulation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 21. Fuller, D. (2002). Globalization for National Building: industrial policy for high-technology products in Taiwan. MIT Industrial Performance Center (IPC), Working Paper 02-002. 22. Geuna, A., A. Salter and W.E. Steinmueller (eds.). (2003). Science and Innovation: Rethinking the rationales for funding and governance: new horizons in the economics of innovation. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. 23. Greene, M. (2008). The origins of developmental state in Taiwan: science policy and the quest for modernization. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 24. Hsu, C-W. (2005). “Formation of industrial innovation mechanisms through the research institute”. Technovation, Vol.25. 1317-1329. 25. Hsu, C-W. and Nystrom, M. (2004). “Organizational innovation for a sustainable national competitive advantage: ITRI and Taiwan’s National Innovation System”. Paper presented at International Engineering Management Conference, Singapore, October 18-21. 26. Hsu, C-W. and Chiang, H-C. (2001. “The government strategy for the upgrading of industrial technology in Taiwan”. Technovation, Vol.21. 123-132. 27. Huang, M-P. (2006). “The cradle of technology”: the Industrial Technology Research Institute”. In The Silicon Dragon: High-Tech Industry in Taiwan. Tsai, T. and Cheng, B-S. (eds.). Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing. 26-50 28. Hung, S-C. and Chu, Y-Y. (2006). “Stimulating new industries from emerging technologies: challenges for the public sector”. Technovation, Vol. 26. 104-110 29. IEK. (2012). Introduction to ITRI/IEK. Industrial Economics & Knowledge Center (IEK), Industrial Technology Research Institute, August. 30. Intarakumnerd, P. (2010). “Two Models of Research Technology Organisations in Asia”. Science, Technology & Society, Vol.16, No.1. 11-28. 31. Intarakumnerd, P. and Goto, A. (2016). “Role of Public Research Institutes in National Innovation Systems in Industrialized Countries: the cases of Fraunhofer, NIST, CSIRO, AIST, and ITRI”. Research Institute of Economy, Trade and Industry (RIETI), Discussion Paper Series 16-E-041. 32. ITRI. (2012). Annual Report. Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI), August. 33. Jan, T-S. and Chen, Y-J. (2006). “The R&D system for industrial development in Taiwan”. Technological Forecasting & Social Change, Vol.73. 559-574. 34. JRC. (2011). Trends in Public and Private Investments in ICT R&D in Taiwan: Technical Note. European Commission, Joint Research Centre (JRC), Institute for Prospective Technological Studies. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union. 35. Kwong, K-S. et al. (ed.). (2001). Industrial Development in Singapore, Taiwan, and South Korea. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing. 36. Lauridsen, L. (1996). “Policies and institutions of industrial deepening and upgrading in Taiwan III – technological upgrading”. A comparative study of policies and institutions of industrial upgrading in Thailand and Taiwan, Vol.6, No.13. 1-69. 37. Lee, D.H., Bae, Z.T., and Lee, J. (1991). “Performance and adaptive roles of the government-supported research institute in South Korea”. World Development, Vol.19, No.10. 421-440. 38. Lee, J. and Win, H.N. (2004). “Technology transfer between university research centers and industry in Singapore”. Technovation, Vol.24. 433-442. 39. Lente, H. van, Hekkert, M., Smits, R. and Waveren, B. (2003). “Roles of systemic intermediaries in transition processes”. International Journal of Innovation Management, Vol.7. No.3. 247-279. 40. Lin, O. (1998). “Science and technology policy and its influene on economic development of Taiwan”. In Behind East Asian growth: the political and social foundations of prosperity. NY: Routledge. 185-208. 41. Liu, S-J. (1998). “Industrial development and structural adaptation in Taiwan: some issues of learned entrepreneurship”. IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management, Vol.45, No.4. 338-348. 42. Mathews, J. and Cho, D-S. (2000). Tiger Technology: the creation of a semiconductor industry in East Asia. NY: Cambridge University Press. 43. Mathews, J. and Hu, M-C. (2007). “Enhancing the Role of Universities in Building National Innovative Capacity in Asia: The Case of Taiwan”. World Development, Vol.35, No.6. 1005-1020. 44. Mina, A. (2010). “Models of Technology Development in Intermediate Research Organization). Paper presented at the DRUID Summer Conference, London, June 16-18. 45. MOEA. (1997). Factory Operation Census. Ministry of Economic Affairs (MOEA), ROC (Taiwan). 46. MOEA. (2006). Factory Operation Census. Ministry of Economic Affairs (MOEA), ROC (Taiwan). 47. Nedrum, L. and Guldbrandsen, M. (2009). “The Technical-Industrial Research Institutes in the Norwegian Innovation System”. In Innovation, Path Dependency, and Policy: The Norwegian Case. Fagerberg, J., Mowery, D., and B. Verspagen (eds.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. 327-348. 48. Noble, G. (1998). Collective Action in East Asia: how ruling parties shape industrial policy. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. 49. Noble, G. (2000). Conspicuous Failures and Hidden Strengths of the ITRI Model: Taiwan’s Technology Policy Toward Hard Disk Drives and CD-ROMs. University of California, San Diego, the Information Storage Industry Center, Report 2000-02. 50. NSC. (2002). Yearbook of Science and Technology of the Republic of China. National Science Council, ROC (Taiwan). 51. OECD. (2007). National Innovation system. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Paris: OECD Publishing. 52. OECD. (2011). Public Research Institutes: Mapping Sector Trends. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Paris: OECD Publishing. 53. Oxford Economics. (2008). Study of the Impact of the Intermediate Research and Technology Sector on the UK Economy. Oxford: Oxford Economics. May. 54. Patel, P. and Pavitt, K. (1994). “National innovation systems: why they are important, and how they might be measured and compared”. Economics of Innovation and New Technology. Vol.3, No.1. 77-95. 55. Rush, H., Hobday, M., Bessant, J., and Arnold, E. (1995). “Strategies for best practice in research and technology institutes: an overview of a benchmarking exercise”. R&D Management, Vol.25, No.1. 17-31. 56. Sheu, R. (2006). “Business Development: ITRI’s Point of View and Experiences”. R&D Management Training Program, ITRI College, Hsinchu. November. 57. Shih, C-T. (2003). Industry Technology and ITRI: the Visible Brain. Hsinchu: ITRI. 58. Simpson, B. (2004). “After the reforms: how have public science research organisations changed?”. R&D Management, Vol.34, No.3. 253–266. 59. Taipei Times. (2016). “The Liberty Times Editorial: Overcoming an addiction to China”. Taipei Times, April 6. 8. 60. Tushman, M.L. and O’Reilly, C. (1996). “Ambidextrous organizations: managing evolutionary and revolutionary change”. California Management Review, Vol.38. 8-30. 61. Tzeng, C-H. (2010). “Managing innovation for economic development in greater China: the origins of Hsinchu and Zhongguancun”. Technology in Society, Vol.32. 110-121. 62. Wade, R. (1990). Governing the market: economic theory and the role of government in East Asia industrialization. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 63. Wang, J-C. and Ma, D. (2011). “Taiwan’s innovation policy and programs to support research and technology based entrepreneurship”. In Science and Technology Based Regional Entrepreneurship: Global Experience in Policy and Program Development. Mian, S. (ed.). Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. 286-305. 64. Weiss, L. and Thurbon, E. (2004). “Where There’s a Will There’s a Way: Governing the Market in Times of Uncertainty”. Issues & Studies, Vol.40, No.1. 61-72. 65. Wessner, C. (ed.). (2013). Committee on the 21st Century Manufacturing: The Role of the Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program of the National Institute of Standards and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. 66. Wong, C-Y., Hu, M-C., and Shiu, J-W. (2015). “Collaboration between Public Research Institutes and Universities: A Study of Industrial Technology Research Institute, Taiwan”. Science, Technology & Society, Vol.20, No.2. 161-181. 67. Wu, R-I. and Tseng M-S. (2003). “Taiwan’s information technology industry”. In Manufacturing Competitiveness in Asia: How internationally competitive national firms and industries developed in East Asia. Jomo K.S. (ed.). 75-106. 68. Wu, Y-S. (2007). “Taiwan`s Developmental State: After the Economic and Political Turmoil”. Asian Survey. Vol.47, No.6. 977-1001. 69. Yu, X-L. (2013). “Institutional learning in economic growth: an innovation system approach”. PhD diss., Case Western Reserve University. January. |