Wednesday 30 September 2020

Housing concerns and the associated research objectives/ research questions: on home ownership

 Housing concerns and the associated research objectives/ research questions: on home ownership



Article 1: Srna Mandič (2018) Motives for Home Ownership: Before and After the Transition, Housing, Theory and Society, 35:3, 281-299, DOI: 10.1080/14036096.2017.1329164.

 Housing concerns

Home ownership has underpinned the dramatic transformation of housing that occurred in countries today generally referred to as post-socialist. The shift to home ownership that came through housing reforms and the privatization of housing has been broadly debated and extensively documented (Clapham, Hegedüs, and Tosics 1996; Hegedüs, Mayo, and Tosics 1996; Lowe and Tsenkova 2003; Struyk 1996; Turner, Hegedüs, and Tosics 1992). Given its strategic role in transitional processes, it is not surprising that home ownership has drawn considerable attention among housing analysts. However, while the changing institutional and policy frameworks of home ownership have been thoroughly examined, very little attention has been paid to its interpretative frameworks, which remain an under-researched issue”;

 

Research objectives/ research questions

“In this paper, the focus is on an interpretative framework for home ownership in post-socialist countries and, more specifically, the motives for home ownership. The aim is to identify the key motives for entry to home ownership and examine any changes following the transition to post-socialism. More precisely, motives for entry to home ownership are examined and compared among pre-transitional, transitional and post-transitional entrants to home ownership based on qualitative data acquired from interviews with 25 Slovenian homeowners from the town of Celje. The interviews form part of the collaborative project Demographic Change and Housing Wealth(DEMHOW) (see Doling and Elsinga 2013) and represent three distinct cohorts that became homeowners in different historical periods. The approach of analytic induction is used, leading to a systematic initial search for similarities in broader categories, which are then developed into subcategories. The resulting categorization of home ownership motives is thus original and data-driven”;

 

Article 2: Chika Ezinwanne Udechukwu, (2008),"Obstacles to individual home ownership in Nigeria", International Journal of Housing Markets and Analysis, Vol. 1 Iss: 2 pp. 182 – 194.

 Housing concerns

Home ownership ranks high amongst the priorities of most individual households and often times, represents their largest singular investment accounting for about 60 per cent of household income. With a per capital income of less than $300, it is no surprise that there is acute shortage of dwelling units in the country”;

 

Research objectives/ research questions

“This paper sets out to investigate the various inhibiting factors to individual home ownership in Nigeria. It aims to establish just how feasible home ownership is in Nigeria and to proffer viable recommendations for positive change”;

 

 

Article 3: Richard Ronald & John Doling (2010) Shifting East Asian Approaches to Home Ownership and the Housing Welfare Pillar, International Journal of Housing Policy, 10:3, 233-254, DOI: 10.1080/14616718.2010.506740.

 Housing concerns

The broad ownership of housing assets is argued to have been perceived by East Asian governments as a means to enhance the family base of welfare provision (Ronald, 2007). Following the Asian Economic Crisis of 1997, housing markets slumped and substantial pressure was put on welfare structures by economic downturn and growing unemployment. In the wake of this challenge, governments adopted new strategies. In the 2000s, state driven expansion of home ownership dissipated and there has been considerable divergence in housing policy approaches”;

 

Research objectives/ research questions

“This paper considers patterns of convergence and subsequent divergence in housing systems in three countries – Japan, Singapore and Hong Kong – in recent decades. Essentially, housing policy readjustments reflect a reorientation around the function of the housing sector that in many respects are becoming detached from the property base of family security, or in other words the home ownership welfare pillar. The overall objective of such an analysis is to demonstrate the dynamic and changing function of housing commodification in East Asian welfare regimes. This was initially characterised by shared tenure-policy logic, but shaped by differences in socioeconomic and market contexts, and policy pathways”;

 

“The contribution of this paper, however, is not only to provide an update on policy trajectories up to and, to some extent, through the recent Global Financial Crisis, but also to deal explicitly with the nature of asset or property-based welfare in the East Asian context and the specific role of home ownership polices and market developments. Moreover, consideration of longer-term socioeconomic destabilisation in East Asian contexts provides some insight for other societies that have more recently sought to build-up owner-occupied housing sectors as a welfare pillar (Doling & Ronald, 2010a, b)”;

 

 

Housing issues and the associated research objectives/ research questions: on housing affordability

 Housing issues and the associated research objectives/ research questions: on housing affordability


 

Article 1: Eddie C.M. Hui a,*, Francis K.W. Wong a, K.W. Chung b, K.Y. Lau c. “Housing affordability, preferences and expectations of elderly with government intervention” Habitat International 43 (2014) 11e21.

 

Housing concerns

“As Hong Kong approaches an ageing society, its housing system needs to be redesigned in order to suit the needs of the elderly people. The current housing system may not be suitable for them in the future. Therefore, it is important to study their housing needs. So far, the Hong Kong government is obligated to put the notion of ageing in placeas a leading principle of elderly service. It means appropriate support should be provided for older people and their families to allow them to grow old with minimal disruption. Government residential care services or nursing homes are the last resorts to elderly. Therefore, to uphold the principle of promoting the well-being of elderly in Hong Kong, it is a must to have a deep understanding on and to identify what constitutes the housing needs (preferences) of elderly”;

 Research objectives and research questions

“This study reviews a variety of housing options to the elderly in both Hong Kong and the overseas and presents findings on elderly peoples housing preferences. Unlike most previous studies which examine factors directly affecting housing preferences, we adopt an indirect approach by investigating factors affecting elderly peoples expectation on their housing, which in turns affect their housing preferences. In particular, we include living time in current housing, which was often overlooked in previous studies (e.g. Phillips, Siu, Yeh, & Cheng, 2004), as a factor in our regression model. We use prospect theory to analyze how these factors influence their expectation on housing. This is the first study to apply prospect theory to investigate elderly housing.”;

 

 

Article 2: Yu-Ju Lin a,*, Chin-Oh Chang a,1, Chien-Liang Chen “Why homebuyers have a high housing affordability problem: Quantile regression analysis” Habitat International 43 (2014) 41e47.

Housing concerns

“Data published by the Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey5 (2006) show that the housing PIRs of most countries in Europe and America are less than 6. However, most of the housing affordability of Asian countries in 2006 was over 6, even more than 9, showing that housing affordability is heavier in Asia. Based on this boom in housing prices, it is reasonable to expect that the housing affordability in Asia might deteriorate more significantly than that in Europe and the United States. Consequently, the heavy housing affordability in Asia is increasingly deteriorating”;

 

“Considerable research has been conducted in this field to seek for the best indicators to measure housing affordability. Quigley and Raphael (2004) observed that housing affordability involves many aspects, and is difficult to measure. Linneman and Megbolugbe (1992) suggested that housing affordability measures should consider income and price distribution simultaneously. Gan and Hill (2009) accounted for the whole distribution of income and house prices, and their results show that lower income households may have housing affordability problems. However, research is limited on the housing affordability of individual Households”;

 Research objectives and research questions

“Although the literature on housing affordability treats only the measuring problem, this study introduces the concept of the individual household affordability problem. As previous studies have shown, most housing affordability research uses qualitative research methods to identify households who might have housing affordability problems. To understand which household may have housing affordability problems, and what types of households with high housing PIR still buy a house, we discuss the household characteristic difference by individual household house PIR (micro PIR). We used quantile regression to analyze different quantiles of households to overcome the problem of measuring the median or mean”;

 

“This study presents a conceptual framework for linking individual household PIR and housing affordability. The objective of this study is to understand the individual household housing affordability problem, and whether households with high housing PIR represent the heavy housing affordability problem”;

 

 Article 3: Sinikka Okkola & Cédric Brunelle (2018) The changing determinants of housing affordability in oil-booming agglomerations: a quantile regression investigation from Canada, 1991–2011, Housing Studies, 33:6, 902-937, DOI: 10.1080/02673037.2017.1408784.

 Housing concerns

The recent economic boom in various resource-driven regions in Canada has highlighted housing market failure to provide suitable, adequate and affordable shelter for low to mid income earners (Goldenberg et al., 2010; Keogh 2015). Narratives of rising homelessness and families struggling to find affordable housing have been publicized in the media during a period when Canada has experienced an unprecedented oil-driven economic growth”;

 

“Few studies have so far investigated how resource booms (or bust) specifically change the distributions of affordability constraints for households in resource-driven agglomerations. This adds to the fact that most studies on housing affordability remain focused on the housing stress of entire communities. However, the reality faced by individual households is complex, and cannot be analysed using only average or median housing price or income. Recent work on income inequality shows that disparities are increasingly taking place in the upper and lower tails of the income distribution, which entails a growing polarization in the housing affordability distribution”;

 Research objectives and research questions

“This study fills these knowledge gaps by analysing the temporal trends taking place during the time of an oil boom, specifically looking at the changing impacts of household characteristics on housing stress at various points across the affordability spectrum”;

 

“In this study, our main research question is how conditions of housing affordability change among households in relation to a regional economic boom? We hypothesize that resource booms generate segmented labour and housing markets which over time favour growing socio-economic polarizations among households in these communities. If so, what are the characteristics and types of households most impacted by housing stress over time?”

 

“This research relies on Statistics Canada’s confidential microdata from the 1991 and 2006 census as well as the National Household Survey (NHS) for 2011. The selected study period starts prior to the most recent oil boom.1 The 2006 census reflects an approximate mid-boom point, after which the global financial crisis of 2008 brought a sharp decline in oil prices. By 2010, the market rebounded to almost the levels of 2007 (Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 2016)”;

Article examples [about homelessness] on housing issues and the associated housing research objectives/ questions

Article examples [about homelessness] on housing issues and the associated housing research objectives/ questions 


Article 1: Peter K. Mackie (2015) Homelessness Prevention and the Welsh Legal Duty: Lessons for International Policies, Housing Studies, 30:1, 40-59, DOI: 10.1080/02673037.2014.927055.

 About housing issues

Across the developed world, there has been a paradigm shift away from warehousing homeless people in temporary accommodation for long periods of time and towards prevention and rapid response-focussed interventions. Studies have proven the benefits of homelessness prevention and rapid response, and this has added great momentum to the policy direction. However, Culhane et al. (2011) argue that homelessness prevention has been pursued with vigour without pausing to systematically examine how the approach fits alongside existing systems. Moreover, academics have begun to think more critically about the prevention turn, questioning its implementation and identifying its deficiencies (Burt et al., 2007; Busch-Geertsema & Fitzpatrick, 2008; Culhane et al., 2011; Parsell & Marston, 2012)”

 

About research objectives and research questions

“Given the growth in policy and academic interest, this section of the paper draws upon key studies to provide a brief overview of what is known about homelessness prevention: the concept is defined; reasons for the paradigm shift are considered; and emerging criticisms of the concept are identified”

 

Article 2: Anthony Warnes & Maureen Crane (2006): The Causes of Homelessness Among Older People in England, Housing Studies, 21:3, 401-421. 

About housing issues

Through previous research by the authors, it had been learnt that many people who become homeless in mid and later life have never been homeless before, raising questions about why this happens and why Britain’s elaborate welfare services do not prevent the outcome”;

 About research objectives and research questions

 “The aims of the three-nation study were to increase understanding of the reasons for homelessness among older people, and to contribute to the development of prevention practice. The study was led by the authors, and project teams of the collaborating organisations in Boston and Melbourne participated in the research design and implementation. The conceptual model underpinning the study was that homelessness is a function of structural and policy factors, health and welfare service organisation and delivery deficiencies, and personal problems, incapacities and behaviour. By studying the incidence of older homelessness in three countries with contrasting welfare and philanthropic regimes, it was reasoned that valuable insights would be obtained of the relative contributions of the policy, service and personal factors”;

 

Article 3: Chris Chamberlain & Guy Johnson (2018) From long-term homelessness to stable housing: investigating ‘liminality’, Housing Studies, 33:8, 1246-1263, DOI: 10.1080/02673037.2018.1424806.

About housing issues

“There is a substantial body of literature that accepts that becoming homeless is best understood as a process (for a review, see: Chamberlain & Johnson, 2013), but much less has been written about the process of exiting from homelessness”

About research objectives and research questions

“This paper outlines a conceptual framework to investigate the process by which people exit from long-term homelessness, using the concept of ‘liminality’.”

 

“The term ‘liminality’ has been used in a number of different ways (Thomassen, 2009), but we use it refer to people feeling like ‘outsiders’ following rehousing. Three potential dimensions of liminality are identified: ‘material’, ‘relational’ and ‘psychological’. The material dimension covers how people feel about their housing. The relational area focuses on people’s relations with friends and relatives. The psychological aspect covers how people manage the stigma of homelessness”;

 

“To investigate whether people experience liminality requires in-depth information on people’s experiences following rehousing. The paper draws on 157 interviews undertaken over 2 years with 64 individuals who had experienced long-term homelessness. At the final interview, all of them were housed and most (87%) had been housed for 12 months or longer”;

Tuesday 29 September 2020

How housing research questions and research methods are related: a note

 How housing research questions and research methods are related: a note:


Exhibit 1:



Exhibit 2


Exhibit 3


Exhibit 4




Macro-perspective {notably, associated with positivism}: examples:
Research question 1: how do the various environmental drivers affect the attribute status of different types of homelessness in Hong Kong [using statistical data {notably, secondary data} and statistical analysis {e.g. multiple regression analysis}]?
Research question 2: how does the number of people experiencing different attribute status of various types of homelessness in Hong Kong affect the reported cases about various types of illnesses of the homeless people [using statistical data and statistical analysis {e.g. multiple regression analysis}]?

Micro-perspective {notably associated with interpretivism}: examples:
Research question 1:
How does a particular group of people in HK [e.g. generation y] perceive the influence of various environmental drivers on the perceived homelessness status of different people in different types of homelessness? The research methods to use are unstructured interview and focus group research, for example.
Research question 2:
How do homeless people in different types of homelessness feel about their quality of life? The research method to use is semi-structured interview research, for example.


Monday 28 September 2020

Housing research topic on research concerns, research objectives, and research questions

Housing research topic on research concerns, research objectives, and research questions:


1. Housing concerns (also note concerns-ownership)

2. Research objectives (to respond to the housing concerns)

E.g. to find out, to understand, to predict, to explain, to evaluate and to recommend.

3. Research questions: 

To meet research objectives, to ask, why, who, how, where, what and when..... ? and, finally, to check whether a particular hypothesis is valid or not..


*** You do need to do literature review and desk research to inform you to formulate your version of 1, 2, and 3, 

*** you need to make use of certain theories to do so properly.

*** you need to have basic knowledge of research methods to do so properly.

Wednesday 2 September 2020

Study note on open innovation for class exercise on literature review

 

Giustina Secundo and Antonio Toma Department of Engineering for Innovation, Facolta di Ingegneria, Universita del Salento, Lecce, Italy Giovanni Schiuma Universita degli Studi della Basilicata, Potenza, Italy, and

Giuseppina Passiante Department of Engineering for Innovation, University of Salento, Lecce, Italy. “Knowledge transfer in open innovation A classification framework for healthcare ecosystems” Business Process Management Journal Vol. 25 No. 1, 2019 pp. 144-163 © Emerald Publishing Limited.

 

[point 1] In a world of ever-changing corporate environments and reduced product life cycles, organizations working in R&D and technology-intensive industry can and should use external ideas as well as internal ones, and internal and external paths to marketto make the most out of their technologies (Chesbrough, 2003, p. 24).

 

[point 2] Chesbrough et al. (2006) proposed a quite broad definition of open innovation as the purposive inflows and outflows of knowledge to accelerate internal innovation and to expand the markets for external use of innovation(Chesbrough et al., 2006, p. 1) using pecuniary and non-pecuniary mechanisms in line with the organizations business model (Chesbrough and Bogers, 2014).

 

[point 3] Since 2003, there has been an abundance of research conducted into open innovation, even though much of this research has focused on individual firms interacting with external partners, large-scale enterprises, leaving a gap in R&D intensive industry and at inter-organizational value network level (alliance, network and, specifically, ecosystem) (Chesbrough et al., 2014).

 

[point 4] The innovation of healthcare ecosystems will likely take the form of a constellation of improvements and not the adoption of a singular product or service. Healthcare ecosystems usually involve a wide number of actors (patients, doctors, nurses, companies and government bodies) that open their innovation processes in order to incorporate knowledge flows originated from or co-produced with external stakeholders (academia, research centers, industry, government, NGOs and public institutions) (Chesbrough and Bogers, 2014; Dahlander and Gann, 2010; Huizingh, 2011; Enkel et al., 2009; Ardito and Messeni Petruzzelli, 2017). Characterizing knowledge in terms of flows means looking at knowledge as a fluid mix of framed experience, values, contextual information, and expert insight that provides a framework for evaluating and incorporating new experiences and information(Davenport and Prusak, 2000, p. 5).

 

Cinzia Battistella, Alberto Felice De Toni, Elena Pessot, (2017) "Practising open innovation: a framework of reference", Business Process Management Journal, Vol. 23 Issue: 6, pp.1311-1336.

 

[point 5] The open innovation (OI) paradigm has received an extensive number of contributions from different research streams (Gassmann, 2006), taking into account a variety of dimensions such as strategy, leadership and organisational structure (Giannopoulou et al., 2011). The exponential growth of this research field has also led to the publication of numerous reviews, addressing major research streams on different topics. In particular, previous studies have focussed on notions of OI, OI forms (in terms of inbound/outbound/coupled processes, number, type and variety of partners, mechanisms, opened phases of the innovation process, types of innovation, focus), effectiveness (in terms of the firms general or innovation performance), contextual factors (size of the company, industry/technology intensity) and strategic orientation (leader/follower, leadership and internal culture, business models, impact of appropriability) (see e.g. literature reviews by Elmquist et al., 2009; Huizingh, 2011; Kovacs et al., 2015; West et al., 2014).

 

[point 6] Beyond theoretical issues, little research has been conducted to thoroughly investigate effective OI implementation in companies, i.e. practices or modes (Giannopoulou et al., 2011; Spithoven et al., 2013; West and Bogers, 2014). While OI practices adoption has been widely proved in different companies and in different contexts (Huizingh, 2011), scholars (Chesbrough and Brunswicker, 2014; Docherty, 2006; Gassmann, 2006; Giannopoulou et al., 2011) agree that companies are still facing difficulties in implementing them, particularly in terms of organisational and cultural barriers. Moreover, companies interact with various combinations of actors, with different roles and strength of ties (Lee et al., 2010) and adopt diverse sets of instruments (Rass et al., 2013) in their OI activities.

 

[point 7] “…an integrated framework to support companies in decision making on when, how and which OI practices to adopt is still lacking (Huizingh, 2011; Bellantuono et al., 2013)”

 

[point 8] The valuable advantages of opening up the innovation process to the outside are widely acknowledged (Boudreau and Lakhani, 2009; Docherty, 2006) and have been experienced in different companies and in different contexts (Huizingh, 2011). OI is associated with superior firm performance (Laursen and Salter, 2006; Rass et al., 2013) and higher innovative activity in companies (Cosh and Zhang, 2011), both in large and small-to-medium-sized ones (Spithoven et al., 2013). This is true in particular: when the technology, design and innovation approaches have yet to be ascertained; when customer needs are highly varied or not yet fully understood; and when companies can separate and outsource distinct parts of the innovation process in order to take advantage of different knowledge and ideas (Boudreau and Lakhani, 2009).

 

[point 9] Developing and exploiting innovation activities in collaboration with external parties requires new decisions that should be delineated in: when, how, with whom, with what purpose and in what way (Huizingh, 2011). While previous research studied management challenges for effective OI implementation (see e.g. van de Vrande et al., 2009 for a study on SMEs in this sense), there is still little research on putting OI into practice (Giannopoulou et al., 2011; West and Bogers, 2014), especially in the case of SMEs.

 

[point 10] Bellantuono et al. (2013) introduce a framework that supports managers in identifying the OI practices that best fit a specific innovation project. For this purpose they study different combinations of variables related to OI practices e.g. access mode, degree or formality, etc. and variables related to a companiesinnovation context in terms of knowledge supply e.g. the level of knowledge they possess. Despite this, they do not provide a list of practices, i.e. they do not explore thoroughly all the possible OI practical approaches.

 

Susanne Ollila and Maria Elmquist. “Managing Open Innovation: Exploring Challenges at the Interfaces of an Open Innovation Arena” CREATIVITY AND INNOVATION MANAGEMENT Volume 20 Number 4 2011.

 

[point 11] The emergence of open innovation initiatives, in which R&D and innovation processes are increasingly opened to external parties, seems to be associated with amplifying the levels of collaboration. Initiatives by large companies such as Procter & Gamble are often cited as success stories of how to use external sources to innovate (Dodgson, Gann & Salter, 2006; Huston & Sakkab, 2006). However, most research has a ‘one firm focus’ and discusses, for instance, how the firm might benefit from open innovation.

 

[point 12] Research on open innovation focuses on new actors, such as innovation intermediaries (Chesbrough, 2006) that provide an open marketplace for ideas, talent and technologies. Innovation intermediaries are variously described in the literature as bridgers (Bessant & Rush, 1995; McEvily & Zaheer, 1999), brokers (Hargadon & Sutton, 1997; Provan & Human, 1999) and as third parties (Mantel & Rosegger, 1987). In an overview of innovation intermediation, Howells (2006) argues that innovation intermediation can be considered as a function, a process and a relationship. In a study of InnoCentive, an innovation intermediary that facilitates open problem solving, Lakhani and Jeppesen (2007) investigate how companies leverage collaboration with these open innovation actors. But again the focus is on a single firm collaborating with an intermediary.

 

[point 13] It is becoming more frequent for organizations to find they are unable to have all the competencies they require in-house, which is forcing them to open up their R&D processes – and to engage in open innovation (Chesbrough, Vanhaverbeke & West, 2006). This has led to experimentation with new types of collaboration between organizations. Chesbrough’s (2003a, 2003b) original open innovation model describes inbound innovation, where firms commercialize external ideas, and outbound innovation where firms out-license or spin-off internal ideas. Enkel, Gassmann and Chesbrough (2009) added a third process to this model: the coupled process that combines the two directions.

 

[point 14] When firms open up their R&D and innovation processes they need to acknowledge the managerial challenges this entails. The degree of firm openness depends on the people and the company culture (Herzog, 2008), and cultural change is thus essential for certain innovation activities (Slowinski et al., 2009). Herzog (2008) argues that open and closed innovation cultures are different and that open innovation requires a risk-taking culture. It has been argued also that being able to combine internal and external sources of innovation requires an ambidextrous mentality (Vanhaverbeke, Van De Vrande & Chesbrough, 2008).

 

 

Marcel Bogers, (2011),"The open innovation paradox: knowledge sharing and protection in R&D collaborations", European Journal of Innovation Management, Vol. 14 Iss: 1 pp. 93 – 117.

 

[point 15] Despite the growing importance of R&D collaborations in particular and open innovation in general, many important questions are still unexplored – also due to the (growing) complexity of such collaborative efforts and the nature of the underlying resources and knowledge (Chesbrough, 2003; Das and Teng, 2000; Granstrand, 2000; Gulati and Singh, 1998; Haefliger et al., 2008; Henkel, 2006). For example, although there is an inherent paradox caused by the natural tension between knowledge sharing and protection, little attention has been given to how firms can protect their technological competencies while they, at the same time, collaborate with other organizations (McEvily et al., 2004) and how firms create and capture value in an era of open innovation when innovating organizations are highly dependent on each other (Vanhaverbeke, 2006). A better understanding of the exact tension between knowledge sharing and protection is therefore important, for academics who wish to further advance the field of open and collaborative innovation as well as for managers who have to cope with this tension field in practice.

 

[point 16] “… it is not surprising that it has been argued that we have entered an era of intellectual and alliance capitalism (Gerlach, 1992; Granstrand, 2000; Narula and Duysters, 2004; Teece, 2000). Gulati and Singh (1998) furthermore note that the growth of inter-firm collaborations has been characterized by increasing diversity of collaborations, with respect to partners’ nationalities, motives and goals, and the formal structures used in collaborations. Moreover, because of the increasing complexity of knowledge, more and different kinds of partners are often needed to achieve a certain goal, including partners from other industries, universities and public research organizations as well as competitors.

 

[point 17] Collaborative agreements in general and knowledge sharing in particular have been explored from a variety of theoretical perspectives (Bogers, 2010). Two notable theories – also in strategic management theory in general (see Acedo et al., 2006; Besanko et al., 2010; Foss and Stieglitz, 2010; Leiblein, 2003) – that have served as a background for studying collaborative efforts are transaction cost economics and the resource-based view of the firm (see Das and Teng, 2000; Hagedoorn et al., 2000; Kogut, 1988; Tsang, 2000). While transaction cost economics and the resource-based view are fundamentally different, they also complement each other (Argyres and Zenger, 2007; Foss, 2003; Mayer and Salomon, 2006; Tsang, 2000). Osborn and Hagedoorn (1997) in fact expect to see more attempts that integrate both transaction cost and non-transaction cost arguments into a more comprehensive theory of inter-organizational alliances and networks.

 

[point 18] According to transaction cost economics, collaboration (as a kind of relational contracting) is the preferred governance mechanism in case of medium production and transaction costs (Dyer, 1997; King, 2007; Oxley, 1997; Williamson, 1975, 1985). In this vein, collaboration copes with high degree of asset specificity (causing switching costs), creates lower uncertainty over specifying and monitoring partners’ performance,  internalizes spillovers, balances the partners’ contributions, and lowers opportunistic behavior (e.g. mutual hostage situation).

 

[point 19] In the resource-based view, on the other hand, collaborations can be used to exploit resource complementarities (Barney, 1991; Das and Teng, 2000; Eisenhardt and Schoonhoven, 1996; Hitt et al., 2000; Lavie, 2006; Mowery et al., 1996). Accordingly, motives for collaboration and partner selection are exploitation of resource complementarity and economies of scale, gaining low cost new market entry, cost and risk management, tacit collusion, and capability building and learning.

 

For class exercise, study the literature review blog article to conduct a literature review on the 19 points above. The link: https://josephho33.blogspot.com/2019/08/literature-review-process-of-alra-for.html.