|
|
|
| Chief Editors |
|
Sungchul Chung,
Research Fellow Emeritus,
STEPI,
Korea
|
|
Dr. Chung is a Senior Research Fellow Emeritus at the Science and Technology Policy Institute (STEPI), and concurrently, an Adjunct Professor at the Graduate School of International Studies, Ewha Women’s University, Seoul, Korea. He has been involved in science, technology and innovation policy research as well as advisory activities for more than twenty years. Dr. Chung was President of STEPI (2005-2008), and served on various high-level advisory bodies, including the Presidential Committee on Policy and Planning (2006-2008), the Presidential Advisory Council on Science and Technology (2006-2008), and the Science and Technology Committee of the Federation of Korean Industries (2006-2009), and others. He is an economist by training and got a Ph.D degree from the University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA.....
|
|
|
Luc Soete,
Professor,
Maastricht University,
The Netherlands
|
|
Soon to be updated
|
|
|
|
|
|
Editorial Board
Members |
|
Youngrak Choi,
Professor,
Korea University,
South Korea
|
|
Dr. Youngrak CHOI is professor at the Korea University. He served as Chairman of Korea Research Council of Public Science & Technology, a member of the Presidential Advisory Council for Science & Technology, and a member of the Presidential Commission on Policy Planning, President of the Science and Technology Policy Institute (STEPI), President of the Korean Society for Technology Management & Economics, and a full member of the National Academy of Engineering of Korea (NAEK). He holds a Ph. D. degree from the Roskilde University in Denmark. He received a LTM (Leadership in Technology Management) Award in Government from Portland International Center for Management of Engineering and Technology (PICMET) and also an Iljin Award from NAEK as contributing to Korea’s S&T policy. His research interests include Korean innovation model, STI policy, and technology and development.
|
|
|
Susan Cozzens,
Professor,
GeorgiaTech,
USA
|
|
Soon To Be Filled
|
|
|
Luke Georghiou,
Professor,
University of Manchester,
UK
|
|
Luke Georghiou B.Sc., Ph.D. is Professor of Science and Technology Policy and Management at Manchester Institute of Innovation Research (formerly PREST) in Manchester Business School at the University of Manchester where he is also Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Humanities. His research interests include evaluation of R&D and innovation policy (particularly in relation to the demand–side), foresight, national and international science policy, and management of innovation. He advises several governments and other organisations on these themes. He is on the Board of the Sustainable Consumption Institute. He recently chaired the Annual Impact Report Panel of the EUREKA Initiative. He was rapporteur of the influential Aho Group report to European leaders Creating an Innovative Europe and in 2007/8 chaired the EC’s Expert Group on ERA Rationales, presented to the European Competitiveness Council of Ministers in July 2008. Most recently he chaired the EU’s panel on Gearing Research Towards Sustainability. He is an elected member of the Board of Governors of the University of Manchester and a member of the Board of Directors of Manchester Science Park Limited.
|
|
|
Mike Hobday,
Professor,
University of Brighton,
UK
|
|
Soon To Be Filled
|
|
|
Fumio Kodama,
Professor Emeritus,
University of Tokyo,
Japan
|
Fumio Kodama is Professor Emeritus at the University of Tokyo. He was Professor at Research Center of Advanced Science and Technology in the University of Tokyo, and was Dean and Professor of Graduate School of Engineering Management at Shibaura Institute of Technology. In addition to teaching, he has worked as Director-in-Research at National Institute of Science and Technology Policy (NISTEP) in 1988-1991. Dr. Kodama was an Editor of Research Policy; a president of The Japan Society of MOT; and a president of The Japan Society for Science Policy and Research Management.
He was Visiting Professor of Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University in 1991-1992, and also taught at Values, Technology, Science, and Society Program at Stanford University in 1992-1993. Dr. Kodama is a graduate of the University of Tokyo, where he received B.S. and M.S. and Ph.D. in Engineering.
He is a recipient of 1991 Sakuzo Yoshino Prize for his Japanese book on high technologies. His English journal publications include "Technological Diversification of Japanese Industry" in Science (1986), "Technology Fusion and the New R&D" in Harvard Business Review (1992). His English books include "Emerging Patterns of Innovation: Sources of Japan's Technological Edge" from Harvard Business School Press (1995)
|
|
|
Philippe Larédo,
Professor,
Universite Paris-Est,
France
|
|
Philippe Larédo is Directeur de Recherche at the newly created Université Paris-Est (Ecole des Ponts, Laboratoire Territoires, Techniques, Sociétés – LATTS and Institut francilien recherches innovations et scoiétés - IFRIS) and professor at the University of Manchester (MBS, Manchester Institute of Innovation Research, MIoIR). His research interests are on breakthrough innovation, on knowledge dynamics in new leading sciences (especially nano sciences and technologies), on the characterisation of public research and teaching organisations and on research and innovation policies. On the latter, he has recently co-ordinated (2004-2009) the European Network of Excellence, PRIME standing for policies for research and innovation in the move towards the ERA (www.prime-noe.org).
|
|
|
Keun Lee,
Professor,
Seoul National University,
South Korea
|
|
Dr. Keun Lee is professor of economics at the Seoul National University, and a director of the Center for Economic Catch-up. He holds a Ph.D. degree from the University of California, Berkeley. He was a consultant at the World Bank, lecturer at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, and a research fellow at the East West Center, Hawaii. The main area of his research is economics of catch-up with focus on innovation, corporate organization and growth, and industrial policy. He is the editor of Seoul Journal of Economics, and also one of the editors for Research Policy. His publications can be downloaded from his web home (www.keunlee.com).
|
|
|
Chaisung Lim,
Professor,
Konkuk University,
South Korea
|
|
Soon to be updated
|
|
|
Kentaro Noboeka,
Professor,
Hitotsubashi Univsrsity,
Japan
|
|
Soon To Be Filled
|
|
|
Ha Young Park,
Professor,
Seoul National Univ.,
South Korea
|
|
Soon To Be Filled
|
|
|
AnnaLee Saxenian,
Professor,
UC Berkeley,
USA
|
AnnaLee Saxenian has made a career of studying regional economics and the conditions under which people, ideas, and geographies combine and connect into hubs of economic activity. Her latest book, The New Argonauts: Regional Advantage in a Global Economy (Harvard University Press, 2006) explores how immigrant engineers from Silicon Valley have transferred the institutions of technology entrepreneurship to emerging regions in their home countries—Taiwan, Israel, China and India—and launching companies far from established centers of skill and technology. The “brain drain,” she argues, has now become “brain circulation”— a powerful economic force for the development of formerly peripheral regions that is sparking profound transformations in the global economy.
Saxenian is professor and dean at the U.C. Berkeley School of Information and a professor in Berkeley’s department of city and regional planning. Her prior publications include Regional Advantage: Culture and Competition in Silicon Valley and Route 128 (Harvard, 1994), Silicon Valley's New Immigrant Entrepreneurs (Public Policy Institute of California, 1999), and Local and Global Networks of Immigrant Professionals in Silicon Valley (PPIC, 2002). She holds a PhD in political science from MIT, a master's in regional planning from U.C. Berkeley, and a BA in economics from Williams College.
|
|
|
Poh-Kam Wong,
Professor,
National University of Singapore,
Singapore
|
|
Soon To Be Filled
|
|
|
Lan Xue,
Professor,
Tsinghua University,
China
|
Lan Xue is a professor and Dean of the School of Public Policy and Management at Tsinghua University in Beijing, China. He is also an adjunct professor of Carnegie Mellon University and a Fellow of IC2 Institute at University of Texas, Austin in the US. His teaching and research interests include public policy analysis and management, science and technology policy, higher education policy, and crisis management.
Dr. Xue holds a Ph.D. in Engineering and Public Policy from Carnegie Mellon University and taught at the George Washington University in Washington DC in the US before retuning back to China in 1996. Among his many public service roles, he is a member of the Expert Committee on Emergency Management of the State Council of China, a Vice President of China Association of Science of Science and S&T Policy, a Vice President of China Association of Public Administration, Vice Chairman of the National Steering Committee for MPA Education, a member of the International Advisory Board of UNU-MERIT, a member of the Governing Board of International Development Research Center (IDRC), and a member of the Visiting Committee of the Harvard Kennedy School.
|
|
|
Seong-jae Yu,
Professor,
KAIST,
South Korea
|
|
Soon To Be Filled
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Managing Editor |
|
Yongsuk Jang,
Research Fellow,
STEPI,
Korea
|
|
Dr. Jang is a research fellow at the Science and Technology Policy Institute (STEPI), a think-tank for science, technology and innovation (STI) policy in Seoul, Korea. Prior to his current position, he has worked as a senior research scientist at the Center for International Science and Technology Policy (CISTP) of the George Washington University, Washington, DC. His primary research interests are STI policies with foci of R&D program evaluation, industrial R&D collaboration, national innovation system, and international cooperation for innovation. He consults various domestic government agencies, foreign governments, and international organizations including OECD and APEC. He actively publishes and involves in a number of academic associations. Currently he serves as a Korean delegation to the Committee of Science and Technology Policy (CSTP) of OECD. He holds a Ph.D. in Public Policy from the George Washington University.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|