|
|
 |
Gianluca Carnabuci
- SDA Professor of Organization and Human Resources Management
|
| gianluca.carnabuci@unibocconi.it |
Via Bocconi 8 20136 MILANO |
| Tel +39 02-5836.6882/.6882 |
| Fax +39 02-5836.6893 |
Curriculum Vitae
Degree in Political Sciences, Università di Genova, 1998.
Ph.D. in Social Sciences, University of Amsterdam, 2005.
Master in Decision Theory and Institutions, University of Castellanza "C. Cattaneo" LIUC, Varese, 1999
Academic position and/or Professional activities
Assistant Professor of Organization, University of Lugano
Research Interests
- Network Analysis
- Technological growth and knowledge recombination
- Intra- and inter-organizational networks
PUBLICATIONS
Books
- “A theory of knowledge growth: Network analysis of US patents, 1975-1999”, PhD thesis, University of Amsterdam Press – Vossiperus, 2005.
Articles
- “Back to the future: career transitions at the dawn of capitalism: The immigration of merchants from the Southern Netherlands to Amsterdam, 1578–1602” (co-authored by Filippo Carlo Wezel), Organization Studies, Forthcoming.
- “With a little help from my colleagues: A social embeddeness perspective on employees’ perceived organizational support” (co-authored by J. Hayton and R. Eisenberger), Journal of Organizational Behavior, Forthcoming.
- “The ecology of technological progress: Competition and symbiosis across technology domains”, Social Forces, forthcoming.
- “The evolving structure of the technological landscape”, Technology Analysis and Strategic Management, forthcoming.
- “Knowledge specialization, knowledge brokerage, and the uneven growth of technology domains”, (co-authored by Jeroen Bruggeman), Social Forces, 2009
- “Knowledge that grows and knowledge that flows: Inventive performance in the semiconductor field", Academy of Management Best Paper Proceedings, 2008 (co-authored by E. Operti)
- “Productivity”. In International Encyclopedia of Public Policy: Governance in a Global Age. Vol. 2: Economic Policy (ed. O’Hara P.). GPERU: Perth. 2008.
- “A note on structural holes theory and niche overlap”, Social Networks, 2003, (co-authored by J. Bruggeman and I. Vermeulen).
|
 |
|