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Pablo D'Este, Frederick Guy,Simona Iammarino

Research collaborations between universities and industry (U-I) are considered to be one important channel of potential localized knowledge spillovers (LKS). These collaborations favour both intended and unintended flows of knowledge and facilitate learning processes between partners from different organizations. Despite the copious literature on LKS, still little is known about the factors driving the formation of U-I research collaborations and, in particular, about the role that geographical proximity plays in the establishment of such relationships. Using collaborative research grants between universities and business firms awarded by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), in this article we disentangle some of the conditions under which different kinds of proximity contribute to the formation of U-I research collaborations, focussing in particular on clustering and technological complementarity among the firms participating in such partnerships.

Additional data

Año de publicación 2013
Revista Journal of Economic Geography
DOI 10.1093/jeg/lbs010
Referencia Pablo D'Este, Frederick Guy,Simona Iammarino (), . Journal of Economic Geography, 13, p. 537