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Bringing History (Back) into International Business


Geoffrey Jones


Harvard University - Entrepreneurial Management Unit

Tarun Khanna


Harvard University - Strategy Unit

July 2006

Journal of International Business Studies, Vol. 37, Issue 4, pp. 453-468, 2006

Abstract:     
We argue that the field of international business should evolve its rhetoric from the relatively uncontroversial idea that ‘history matters’ to exploring how it matters. We discuss four conceptual channels through which history matters, illustrating each with a major example. First, historical variation is at least a worthy complement to contemporary cross-sectional variation in illuminating conceptual issues. As an example, we show that conclusions reached by the literature on contemporary emerging market business groups are remarkably similar to independently reached conclusions about a very similar organizational form that was ubiquitous in the age of empire. Second, historical evidence avoids spurious labeling of some phenomena as ‘new’, and by so doing may challenge current explanations of their determinants. Whereas some firm types today were also present earlier, some types have disappeared, some have appeared, and some have disappeared and reappeared later. Third, history can allow us to move beyond the oft-recognized importance of issues of path dependence to explore the roots of Penrosian resources. We argue that the choices made by Jardine's and Swire's in Asia today, for example, are an outgrowth of strategic choices first in evidence more than a century ago. These would remain obscured absent an historical analysis. Fourth, there are certain issues that are unaddressable, except in the really long (that is, historical) run. Exploring the causal relationship (if any) between foreign direct investment, a staple of the international business literature, and long-run economic development provides one important example. Throughout, we advocate embracing rigorous methods for analyzing small-sample and qualitative data when conventional regression techniques do not apply. That is, we suggest that re-embracing history in the mainstream is not tantamount to sacrificing methodological rigor.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 16

Accepted Paper Series


Date posted: April 18, 2011  

Suggested Citation

Jones, Geoffrey and Khanna, Tarun, Bringing History (Back) into International Business (July 2006). Journal of International Business Studies, Vol. 37, Issue 4, pp. 453-468, 2006. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1810386 or http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/palgrave.jibs.8400198

Contact Information

Geoffrey Jones (Contact Author)
Harvard University - Entrepreneurial Management Unit ( email )
Cambridge, MA 02163
United States
Tarun Khanna
Harvard University - Strategy Unit ( email )
Harvard Business School
Boston, MA 02163
United States
617-495-6038 (Phone)
617-495-0355 (Fax)
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


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References:  10
Citations:  15

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