“…Theoretical perspectives range from diversity theories (Mohammadi, Brostrom, and Franzoni, ) to human resource management (Aagaard, ), institutional theories (Radaelli, Currie, Frattini, and Lettieri, ), open innovation (Kamuriwo, Baden‐Fuller, and Zhang, ), organizational identity and managerial identity‐dissemination discourse (Perra, Sidhu, and Volberda, ), resource management (Li, Li, Wang, and Ma, ), and social network theories (Dong, McCarthy, and Schoenmakers, ). The proposed methodologies encompass both case studies (Aagaard, ; Radaelli et al, ) and quantitative analyzes, with the latter including panel data (Kamuriwo et al, ), network analyses (Dong et al, ), and cross‐sectional specifications (Li et al, ; Mohammadi et al, ; Perra et al, ). Six out of seven papers focus on a single national context, namely China (Li et al, ), Italy (Radaelli et al, ), the Netherlands (Perra et al, ), Sweden (Mohammadi et al, ), the United Kingdom (Kamuriwo et al, ), and the United States (Dong et al, ).…”