Knowledge will always get through : inventors, international networks, and flows of technological knowledge between Britain and the United States in the interwar deglobalization period
Spadavecchia, Anna (2026) Knowledge will always get through : inventors, international networks, and flows of technological knowledge between Britain and the United States in the interwar deglobalization period. Journal of Management Studies. ISSN 0022-2380 (https://doi.org/10.1111/joms.70106)
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Abstract
Researchers have highlighted that institutional contexts affect the transnational diffusion of knowledge. However, the influence of institutions on the flow of knowledge through cross-national networks remains under-theorized, limiting our understanding of the dynamics of knowledge creation and the factors that may hinder it. Drawing on data from over 8000 US patents granted to British inventions, alongside a case study of a network of inventors and scientists, this research examines how the interwar phase of deglobalization affected the international diffusion of technological knowledge. The analysis shows that interwar nationalistic states' efforts constrained, rather than fully halted, the cross-border flow of knowledge within networks. Deglobalization particularly hindered the diffusion of tacit knowledge, which depends on personal interaction, whereas codified knowledge in patents and scientific publications continued to circulate more easily. These findings have contemporary relevance and suggest that, despite policymakers' efforts to reverse globalization through protectionist policies, tacit and codified knowledge is likely to continue crossing national borders through the networks of inventors and scientists.
ORCID iDs
Spadavecchia, Anna
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1468-0206;
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Item type: Article ID code: 96091 Dates: DateEvent28 April 2026Published28 April 2026Published Online30 March 2026AcceptedSubjects: Social Sciences > Commerce > Business Department: Strathclyde Business School > Hunter Centre for Entrepreneurship, Strategy and Innovation Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 24 Apr 2026 14:31 Last modified: 02 Jun 2026 07:11 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/96091
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