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A Longitudinal Study of the United Kingdom 1500‐1900: The Rise and Fall of Innovative Leadership

Steve Dunphy (Assistant Professor of Management at Northeastern Illinois University,)
Paul A. Herbig (Professor in the Department of Management and Marketing at Texas A&M University)
Frederick A. Palumbo (Works in the Department of Marketing at Yeshua University, New York.)

Management Decision

ISSN: 0025-1747

Article publication date: 1 December 1994

1088

Abstract

Before 1500 Britain was not considered a major European power. Three hundred years later Britain led the way for the Industrial Revolution and held sway economically and militarily during the nineteenth century. The twentieth century saw the United Kingdom lose her empire, her military leadership and, most of all, her capacity to lead the world in technological innovations. What were the circumstances which first thrust England into world leadership and then led her into technological decline? Examines the rise and fall in a sociocultural context and attempts to generalize the results into a modern context to understand better the innovation phenomenon.

Keywords

Citation

Dunphy, S., Herbig, P.A. and Palumbo, F.A. (1994), "A Longitudinal Study of the United Kingdom 1500‐1900: The Rise and Fall of Innovative Leadership", Management Decision, Vol. 32 No. 9, pp. 50-61. https://doi.org/10.1108/00251749410071649

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1994, MCB UP Limited

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