![]() |
|
|
Call for Papers NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN TECHNOLOGY MANAGEMENT EDUCATION Guest Editors: Phillip Phan, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute The teaching of technology management has a long history in business schools. However, the nature of such education and its focus has changed in recent years. For example, the emphasis on entrepreneurship, venture capital, and emerging technologies has reinvigorated the discipline and brought new issues and new educators to the forefront. The rise of a knowledge-based economy has also focused greater attention on innovation and the commercialization of intellectual property. New institutions (e.g., incubators and science parks) and new organizational forms (e.g., research-based joint ventures, and technology alliances) have emerged that may have profound effects on technology management education. Non-profit institutions, most notably, universities and federal laboratories, have become much more aggressive in protecting and exploiting their intellectual property. They are also working much more closely with industry and government. The involvement of government and non-governmental institutions has led to growing international recognition of the narrowness of technology education. This has resulted in the creation of new courses and programs related to technological entrepreneurship at many universities. Some countries (e.g. Japan, Singapore, and Ireland) are developing ‘bilingual engineers’ with capabilities in technology and business. A concomitant trend is the rapid growth in knowledge and innovation management as a professional field. In many countries, national governments have supported these initiatives by enacting legislation to facilitate public-private research partnerships, technology transfer from universities to firms (e.g., the Bayh-Dole Act of 1980), and collaborative research. For example, the European Union, China, and Singapore have established technology-based venture funds to stimulate the development of technology-based start up companies. Government is also providing subsidies for research-based joint ventures involving universities and firms (e.g., the U.S. Commerce Department’s Advanced Technology Program), shared use of expertise and laboratory facilities (e.g., the U.S. National Science Foundation’s Industry-University Cooperative Research Centers), and programs to promote management and entrepreneurship education among scientists and engineers (e.g. the Science Enterprise Challenge in the U.K.). Technology managers’ organizations are also establishing education programs to professionalize their members (e.g., UNICO and BIOTECHYES in the U.K.).
Submissions should be received by September 1, 2008 and should be accompanied by an assurance of originality and exclusivity. Two types of submissions are being solicited: (1) Essays, Dialogues, and Interviews that focus upon well-thought-out or documented positions and viewpoints concerned with one of the topical themes; and (2) Research and Review manuscripts presenting original empirical research and the extension of theory. All submissions will be subject to a rigorous double-blind peer review process, with one or more of the guest editors acting as action editor, and final approval coming from the journal editor. Invitations to revise and resubmit will follow initial submissions in approximately 3 months. Final acceptances will be made by June, 2009. ![]() |
![]() |
[ AMLE Home ] |
[ AOM Publications ] | [ Subscriptions ] | [ Articles ] |