The Copenhagen Prize was established by the Copenhagen Business School and awarded for the first time at the EIBA Conference 2003. The 3.000€ award honours the best paper written by a young scholar in International Business. The winning paper must have been accepted for presentation at the EIBA conference and have been written by an author or authors under 40 years of age. Contenders for the award should indicate their candidature with their submission.
Winner 2009
Annique Un, University of South Carolina, USA
"Advantages of foreigness in innovation"
Winners 2008
Henrik Dellestrand & Philip Kappen, Uppsala University, Sweden
"Headquarter allocation of resources to intra-MNE transfer projects"
Winners 2007
Joaquin Alegre & Jose Plà Barber, University of Valencia & Ricardo Chiva, University Jaume I, Spain
"Organisational learning capability, innovation and export intensity: Evidence from Italian and Spanish ceramic tiles producers"
Winners 2006
Christian Schwens & Rüdiger Kabst, University of Giessen, Germany
"How early internationalizers learn: Experience of others and paradigms of interpretation"
Winner 2005
Helmut Fryges, Centre for European Economic Research, Germany
"The change of sales mode in international markets - Empirical results for German and British high-tech firms"
Winner 2004
Fai Felicia, Bath University, U.K
"Using supply relationships for economic development: The process, content and context of knowledge transfers between MNEs and Chinese Suppliers"
Winner 2003
Dorothee Feils, University of Alberta, Canada
"The Impact of NAFTA on Foreign Direct Investment in Canada, Mexico and the US" |