1. Globelics is a worldwide community of scholars working on
innovation and competence building in the context of economic development
(www.globelics.org).
2. Physical technologies are the set of material resources
necessary for the generation of a product or service. In drug development,
physical technologies would be the active components present in medicine. Social
technologies consist of forms of human organization necessary for the production
process, labour division, assignment of responsibilities and even the way in
which the products or services will be used.
3. The knowledge transfer tradition has offered a linear vision
in which the Academy was responsible of producing knowledge that firms should
incorporate into their productive processes. Nevertheless, the concept has
evolved, opening the door for transfer activities among different actors and in
multiple directions (Casas, 2005).
4. Arocena, R. and Sutz, J. (2012) ‘Research and innovation
policies for social inclusion: an opportunity for developing countries’,
Innovation and Development, 2, 1,
pp.147–58.
5. Casas, R. (2005) ‘Exchange and knowledge flows between large
firms and research institutions’, Innovation, 7, 2–3,
pp.188–99.