. "Appendix F: Bibliography." An Assessment of the Small Business Innovation Research Program at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2009.
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An Assessment of the SBIR Program at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Audretsch, David B., and Paula E. Stephan. 1996. “Company-scientist locational links: The case of biotechnology.” American Economic Review 86(3):641-642.
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Baker, Alan. No date. “Commercialization Support at NSF.” Draft.
Barfield, C., and W. Schambra, eds. 1986. The Politics of Industrial Policy. Washington, DC: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research.
Baron, Jonathan. 1998. “DoD SBIR/STTR Program Manager.” Comments at the Methodology Workshop on the Assessment of Current SBIR Program Initiatives, Washington, DC, October.
Barry, C. B. 1994. “New directions in research on venture capital finance.” Financial Management 23 (Autumn):3-15.
Bator, Francis. 1958. “The anatomy of market failure.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 72: 351-379.
Bingham, R. 1998. Industrial Policy American Style: From Hamilton to HDTV. New York: M.E. Sharpe.
Birch, D. 1981. “Who Creates Jobs.” The Public Interest 65 (Fall):3-14.
Branscomb, Lewis M., Kennth P. Morse, Michael J. Roberts, and Darin Boville. 2000. ManagingTechnical Risk: Understanding Private Sector Decision Making on Early Stage TechnologyBased Projects. Washington, DC: Department of Commerce/National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Branscomb, Lewis M., and Philip E. Auerswald. 2001. Taking Technical Risks: How Innovators,Managers, and Investors Manage Risk in High-Tech Innovations, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Branscomb, L. M., and P. E. Auerswald. 2002. Between Invention and Innovation: An Analysis ofFunding for Early-Stage Technology Development. Gaithersburg, MD: National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Branscomb, L. M., and P. E. Auerswald. 2003. “Valleys of Death and Darwinian Seas: Financing the Invention to Innovation Transition in the United States.” The Journal of Technology Transfer 28(3-4).
Branscomb, Lewis M., and J. Keller. 1998. Investing in Innovation: Creating a Research and Innovation Policy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Brav, A., and P. A. Gompers. 1997. “Myth or reality?: Long-run underperformance of initial public offerings; Evidence from venture capital and nonventure capital-backed IPOs.” Journal ofFinance 52:1791-1821.
Brodd, R. J. 2005. Factors Affecting U.S. Production Decisions: Why Are There No Volume Lithium-Ion Battery Manufacturers in the United States? ATP Working Paper No. 05-01, June 2005.
Brown, G., and Turner J. 1999. “Reworking the Federal Role in Small Business Research.” Issues inScience and Technology XV, no. 4 (Summer).
Bush, Vannevar. 1946. Science—the Endless Frontier. Republished in 1960 by U.S. National Science Foundation, Washington, DC.
Carden, S. D., and O. Darragh. 2004. “A Halo for Angel Investors.” The McKinsey Quarterly 1.
Cassell, G. 2004. “Setting Realistic Expectations for Success.” In National Research Council. SBIR:Program Diversity and Assessment Challenges. Charles W. Wessner, ed. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
Caves, Richard E. 1998. “Industrial organization and new findings on the turnover and mobility of firms.” Journal of Economic Literature 36(4):1947-1982.
Christensen, C. 1997. The Innovator’s Dilemma. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press.
Clinton, William Jefferson. 1994. Economic Report of the President. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
Clinton, William Jefferson. 1994. The State of Small Business. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.