Volume 53 2010-2011 Index to Authors Bahrami, Homa, and Stuart Evans, “Super-Flexibility for Real-Time Adaptation: Perspectives from Silicon Valley,” 53/3 (Spring 2011): 21-39. Ballinger, Gary, Elizabeth Craig, Rob Cross, and Peter Gray, “A Stitch in Time Saves Nine: Leveraging Networks to Reduce the Costs of Turnover,” 53/4 (Summer 2011): 111-133. Chesbrough, Henry, “fhe Case for Open Services Innovation: The Commodity Trap,” 53/3 (Spring 2011): 5-20. Craig, Elizabeth. See Ballinger, Gary. Cross, Rob. See Ballinger, Gary. del-Palacio, Itxaso. See Engel; Jerome S. Donthu, Naveen. See Porter, Constance Elise. Doz, Yves L. See Wilson, Keeley. Eisingerich, Andreas B. See Tsai, Hueiting. Engel, Jerome S., and Itxaso del-Palacio, “Giobal Clusters of Innovation: The Case of Israel and Silicon Valley,” 53/2 (Winter 2011): 27-49. Evans, Stuart. See Bahrami, Homa. Gelb, Betsy DuBois. See Yujuico, Emmanuel. Gray, Peter. See Ballinger, Gary. Hanson, Kirk O. See Six Responses. Iveroth, Einar, “Inside Ericsson: A Framework for the Practice of Leading Global IT-Enabled Change,” 53/1 (Fall 2010): 136-153. Karnani, Aneel, “‘Doing Well by Doing Good’: The Grand Illusion,” 53/2 (Winter 2011): 69-86. Karnani, Aneel, “CSR Stuck in a Logical Trap (A response to Pietra Rivoli and Sandra Waddock’s “‘First They Ignore You...’: The Time-Context Dynamic and Corporate Responsibility)”, ” 53/2 (Winter 2011): 105-111. Keil, Mark, and Magnus Mahring, “Is Your Project Turning into a Black Hole?” 53/1 (Fall 2010): 6-31. Lawrence, Anne T., “Managing Disputes with Nonmarket Stakeholders: Wage a Fight, Withdraw, Wait, or Work It Out?” 53/1 (Fall 2010): 90-113. Lenfle, Sylvain, and Christoph Loch, “Lost Roots: How Project Management Came to Emphasize Control Over Flexibility and Novelty,” 53/1 (Fall 2010): 32-55. Lichtenthaler, Eckhard. See Lichtenthaler, Ulrich. Lichtenthaler, Ulrich, and Eckhard Lichtenthaler, “Technology Transfer across Organizational Boundaries: Absorptive Capacity and Desorptive Capacity,” 53/1 (Fall 2010): 154-170. Loch, Christoph. See Lenfle, Sylvain. MacElroy, William H. See Porter, Constance Elise. Mackey, John. See Six Responses. Mahring, Magnus. See Keil, Mark. Minor, Dylan, and John Morgan, “CSR as Reputation Insurance: Primum Non Nocere,” 53/3 (Spring 2011): 40-59. Moraitis, Thras. See Smit, Han T_J. Morgan, John. See Minor, Dylan. O'Reilly, Charles A., Il, and Michael L. Tushman, “Organizational Ambidexterity in Action: How Managers Explore and Exploit,” 53/4 (Summer 2011): 5-22. O'Toole, James, and David Vogel, “Two and a Half Cheers for Conscious Capitalism,” 53/3 (Spring 2011): 60-76. Porter, Constance Elise, Naveen Donthu, William H. MacElroy, and Donna Wydra, “How to Foster and Sustain Engagement in Virtual Communities,” 53/4 (Summer 2011): 80-110. Rauch, Doug. See Six Responses. Rivoli, Pietra, and Sandra Waddock, “’First They Ignore You...’: The Time-Context Dynamic and Corporate Responsibility,” 53/2 (Winter 2011): 87-104. Rivoli, Pietra, and Sandra Waddock, “The Grand Misapprehension (A response to Aneel Karnani’s “‘Doing Well by Doing Good’: The Grand IIlusion”),” 53/2 (Winter 2011): 112-116. Schroth, Holly A., “It’s Not About Winning, It’s About Getting Better,” 53/4 (Summer 2011): 134-153. Sisodia, Rajendra S. See Six Responses. Six Responses to “Two and a Half Cheers for Conscious Capitalism,” by James O’Toole and David Vogel: “The Long History of Conscious Capitalism,” Kirk O. Hanson; “What Conscious Capitalism Really Is,” John Mackey; “Conscious Capitalism: A Better Road Map,” Doug Rauch; “Conscious Capitalism: A Better Way to Win,” Rajendra S. Sisodia; “What Are the Limits to Conscious Capitalism?” Michael Strong; “Can We Find Another Hali a Cheer?” Peter Thigpen; 53/3 (Spring 2011): 77-124 Smit, Han T.J., and Thras Moraitis, “Playing at Serial Acquisitions,” 53/1 (Fall 2010): 56-89. Somaya, Deepak, David Teece, and Simon Wakeman, “Innovation in Multi-Invention Contexts: Mapping Solutions to Technological and Intellectual Property Complexity,” 53/4 (Summer 2011): 47-79. Strong, Michael. See Six Responses. , Teece, David. See Somaya, Deepak. Thigpen, Peter. See Six Responses. Tsai, Hueiting, and Andreas B. Eisingerich, “Internationalization Strategies of Emerging Markets Firms,” 53/1 (Fall 2010): 114-135. Tushman, Michael L. See O'Reilly, Charles A., III. van Tulder, Rob. See Wijen, Frank. Vogel, David. O’Toole, James. Waddock, Sandra. See Rivoli, Pietra. Waddock, Sandra. See Rivoli, Pietra. Wakeman, Simon. See Somaya, Deepak. Wijen, Frank, and Rob van Tulder, “Integrating Environmental and International Strategies in a World of Regulatory Turbulence,” 53/4 (Summer 2011): 23-46. Wilson, Keeley, and Yves L. Doz, “Agile Innovation: A Footprint Balancing Distance and Immersion,” 53/2 (Winter 2011): 6-26. Wydra, Donna. See Porter, Constance Elise. Yujuico, Emmanuel, and Betsy DuBois Gelb, “Marketing Technological Innovation to LDCs: Lessons from One Laptop Per Child,” 53/2 (Winter 2011): 50-68. Index to Titles “Agile Innovation: A Footprint Balancing Distance and Immersion,” Keeley Wilson and Yves L. Doz, 53/2 (Winter 2011): 6-26. “The Case for Open Services Innovation: The Commodity Trap,” Henry Chesbrough, 53/3 (Spring 2011): 5-20. “CSR as Reputation Insurance: Primum Non Nocere,” Dylan Minor and John Morgan, 53/3 (Spring 2011): 40-59. “CSR Stuck in a Logical Trap (A response to Pietra Rivoli and Sandra Waddock’s “‘First They Ignore You...’: The Time-Context Dynamic and Corporate Responsibility)”, ” Aneel Karnani, 53/2 (Winter 2011): 105-111. “Doing Well by Doing Good’: The Grand Illusion,” Aneel Karnani, 53/2 (Winter 2011): 69-86. “First They Ignore You...’: The Time-Context Dynamic and Corporate Responsibility,” Pietra Rivoli and Sandra Waddock, 53/2 (Winter 2011): 87-104. “Global Clusters of Innovation: The Case of Israel and Silicon Valley,” Jerome S. Engel and Itxaso del- Palacio, 53/2 (Winter 2011): 27-49. “The Grand Misapprehension (A response to Aneel Karnani’s “Doing Well by Doing Good’: The Grand Iusion”),” Pietra Rivoli and Sandra Waddock, 53/2 (Winter 2011): 112-116. “How to Foster and Sustain Engagement in Virtual Communities,” Constance Elise Porter, Naveen Donthu, William H. MacElroy, and Donna Wydra, 53/4 (Summer 2011): 80-110. “Innovation in Multi-Invention Contexts: Mapping Solutions to Technological and Intellectual Property Complexity,” Deepak Somaya, David Teece, and Simon Wakeman, 53/4 (Summer 2011): 47-79. “Inside Ericsson: A Framework for the Practice of Leading Global IT-Enabled Change,” Einar Iveroth, 53/1 (Fall 2010): 136-153. “Integrating Environmental and International Strategies in a World of Regulatory Turbulence,” Frank Wijen and Rob van Tulder, 53/4 (Summer 2011): 23-46. “Internationalization Strategies of Emerging Markets Firms,” Hueiting Tsai and Andreas B. Eisingerich, 53/1 (Fall 2010): 114-135. “Is Your Project Turning into a Black Hole?” Mark Keil and Magnus Mahring, 53/1 (Fall 2010): 6-31. “It’s Not About Winning, It’s About Getting Better,” Holly A. Schroth, 53/4 (Summer 2011): 134-153. “Lost Roots: How Project Management Came to Emphasize Control Over Flexibility and Novelty,” Sylvain Lenfle and Christoph Loch, 53/1 (Fall 2010): 32-55. “Managing Disputes with Nonmarket Stakeholders: Wage a Fight, Withdraw, Wait, or Work It Out?” Anne T. Lawrence, 53/1 (Fall 2010): 90-113. “Marketing Technological Innovation to LDCs: Lessons from One Laptop Per Child,” Emmanuel Yujuico and Betsy DuBois Gelb, 53/2 (Winter 2011): 50-68. “Organizational Ambidexterity in Action: How Managers Explore and Exploit,” Charles A. O'Reilly Il and Michael L. Tushman, 53/4 (Summer 2011): 5-22. “Playing at Serial Acquisitions,” Han T.J. Smit and Thras Moraitis, 53/i (Fall 2010): 56-89. Six Responses to “Two and a Half Cheers for Conscious Capitalism,” by James O'Toole and David Vogel: “The Long History of Conscious Capitalism,” Kirk O. Hanson; “What Conscious Capitalism Really Is,” John Mackey; “Conscious Capitalism: A Better Road Map,” Doug Rauch; “Conscious Capitalism: A Better Way to Win,” Rajendra S. Sisodia; “What Are the Limits to Conscious Capitalism?” Michael Strong; “Can We Find Another Half a Cheer?” Peter Thigpen, 53/3 (Spring 2011): 77-124 “A Stitch in Time Saves Nine: Leveraging Networks to Reduce the Costs of Turnover,” Gary Ballinger, Elizabeth Craig, Rob Cross, and Peter Gray, 53/4 (Summer 2011): 111-133. “Super-Flexibility for Real-Time Adaptation: Perspectives from Silicon Valley,” Homa Bahrami and Stuart Evans, 53/3 (Spring 2011): 21-39. “Technology Transfer across Organizational Boundaries: Absorptive Capacity and Deserptive Capacity,” Ulrich Lichtenthaler and Eckhard Lichtenthaler, 53/1 (Fall 2010): 154-170. “Two and a Half Cheers for Conscious Capitalism,” James O’Toole and David Vogel, 53/3 (Spring 2011): 60-76.