1. Notable examples of management scientists include M. Porter, Clusters and the new economics of competition, Harvard Business Review, November/December, 77–90 (1998);
2. M. J. Enright, Regional clusters and multinational enterprises: Independence, dependence, or interdependence? International Studies of Management & Organisations 30(2), 114–138 (2000);
3. P. Almeida and B. Kogut, Localisation of knowledge and the mobility of engineers in regional networks, Management Science 45(7), 905–917 (1999). International business studies include J. H. Dunning, Location and the multinational enterprise: A neglected factor? Journal of International Business Studies 29(1), 45–66 (1998);
4. L. Nachum, Economic geography and the location of TNCs: Financial and professional service FDI to the US, Journal of International Business Studies 31(3), 367–385 (2000);
5. J. Birkinshaw and N. Hood, Characteristics of foreign subsidiaries in industry clusters, Journal of International Business Studies 31(1), 141–154 (2000). Work related to knowledge creation is represented in O. Solvell and I. Zander, International diffusion of knowledge: Isolating mechanisms and the role of MNE, in A. D. Chandler, P. Hagstrom and O. Solvell (eds.), The Dynamic Firm Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York (1998);