Search for dissertations about: "Industrial networks"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 319 swedish dissertations containing the words Industrial networks.
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1. Industrial Networks : Purposes and Configurations in the Circular Economy
Abstract : Today, it is common knowledge that mitigation of and adaptation to climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution require sustainability transitions. An essential sustainability transition, for mitigating and adapting to resource depletion, is the shift from unsustainable to sustainable production and consumption patterns. READ MORE
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2. Evolving Industrial Networks : Data-Driven Network Traffic Modelling and Monitoring
Abstract : The concept of Industrial IoT encompasses the joint applicability of operation and information technologies to expand the efficiency expectation of automation to green and flexible processes with innovative products and services. Future industrial networks need to accommodate, manage and guarantee the performance of converged traffic from different technologies. READ MORE
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3. Activity Linking in Industrial Networks
Abstract : The ways in which industrial activities are undertaken and linked have profound implications for organizational performance. The linking of activities is therefore a phenomenon which, in various shapes and forms, has been of ample concern to both academic scholars and industrial practitioners. READ MORE
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4. Networks and Demand. The Use of Electricity in an Industrial Process
Abstract : The formation of demand for an individual resource is examined in a network setting. Demand is seen as an interactive process, where several firms make use of a resource directly and indirectly and, in so doing, shape the primary demand for it. This thesis is also concerned with how an individual firm can influence its demand. READ MORE
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5. Engineered temporary networks : Effects of control and temporality on inter-organizational interaction
Abstract : The world is facing a growing threat of antibiotic resistance. The development of new antibiotics is of utmost importance; otherwise, we go back to the pre-antibiotic era where common infections become life-threatening. Despite this need for new antibiotics, a market failure is hampering its development. READ MORE