“…For example, scholars in economics and strategy have emphasized resource complementarity, cost defrayment, risk sharing, and value creation between firms (Eisenhardt & Schoonhoven, 1996; Walter, Ritter, & Gemünden, 2001; Dussauge, Garrette, & Mitchell, 2004; Lin, Yang, & Arya, 2009; Rice, Liao, Martin, & Galvin, 2012) and scholars in social network have emphasized social endorsements, creation of legitimacy, and learning in inter-organizational relationships (Stuart, Hoang, & Hybels, 1999; Chung, Singh, & Lee, 2000; Baum, Rowley, Shipilov, & Chuang, 2005; Suseno & Ratten, 2007; Ahuja, Polidoro, & Mitchell, 2009; Kim & Choi, 2014). On the other hand, research on the competitive side of inter-organization relationships concerns the impact of opportunism such as potential resource misappropriation and value appropriation between firms on inter-organizational relationships (Li, Eden, Hitt, & Ireland, 2008; Sánchez, Vélez, & Álvarez-Dardet, 2013). For example, an inter-organizational relationship is almost always partly competitive, the larger firm often attempting to capture the technology of the smaller one, to transfer it to its own operations, and, ultimately, to appropriate it (Doz, 1988: 32).…”