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Home >  Books >  Building High-Tech Clusters
Building High-Tech Clusters
Print Mail
Silicon Valley and Beyond
By Scott Wallsten, Ashish Arora, Suma Athreye, Erran Carmel, Kevin Davis, Catherine de Fontenay, Michael Horvath, Gordon Moore, John Richards, AnnaLee Saxenian, Salvatore Torrisi
Edited by Timothy Bresnahan, Alfonso Gambardella
Posted: Wednesday, June 18, 2003
Building High-Tech Clusters
275 pages
Cambridge University Press
Publication Date: April 2004
Hardcover
ISBN: 0521827221

The contributions to this study of the origins of centers of industrial and technological innovation (such as Silicon Valley) reveal that these concentrated clusters of entrepreneurial high tech firms are characterized by rapid economic growth. No other analysts have examined how such clusters start, although many earlier works have studied Silicon Valley. The study's contributors conclude that the key public and business policy elements of starting a cluster are common to many regions, countries, and time periods.

AEI resident scholar Scott Wallsten wrote the chapter entitled "The Role of Government in Regional Technology Development: The Effects of Science Parks and Public Venture Capital."



Table of Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. Learning the Silicon Valley Way
    Gordon Moore and Kevin Davis
  3. Israel's Silicon Wadi: The Forces behind Cluster Formation
    Catherine de Fontenay and Erran Carmel
  4. In the Footsteps of Silicon Valley? Indian and Irish Software in the International Division of Labor
    Ashish Arora, Alfonso Gambardella, and Salvatore Torrisi
  5. Agglomeration and Growth: A Study of the Cambridge Hi-Tech Cluster
    Suma Athreye
  6. Clusters, Competition, and "Global Players" in ICT Markets: The Case of Scandinavia
    John Richards
  7. Taiwan's Hsinchu Region: Imitator and Partner for Silicon Valley
    AnnaLee Saxenian
  8. The Role of Government in Regional Technology Development: The Effects of Public Venture Capital and Science Parks
    Scott Wallsten
  9. Imitating Silicon Valley: Regional Comparisons of Innovation Activity Based on Venture Capital Flows
    Michael Horvath
  10. Conclusion--Old Economy Inputs for New Economy Outcomes: What Have We Learned?
    Timothy Bresnahan and Alfonso Gambardella

Related Links
High-Tech Cluster Bombs: Why Successful Technology Hubs Are the Exception, Not the Rule
Why Silicon Valley Matters More
AEI-Brookings Joint Center for Regulatory Studies


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