Innovation and the Intellectual Property System
Kluwer Law International (Verlag)
978-90-411-0907-1 (ISBN)
Through both theoretical and empirical analyses, the book explores current debates surrounding the role of patenting within the contemporary innovation system, notably those relating to university research and technological competitiveness. The text highlights the growing tensions between the IP system and the wider innovation environment, identifies the potential for and limits of universities' engagement with the system and explores the impact of new IP policy on innovation. The book provides a timely analysis of a range of problems which many governmental, corporate, professional and academic groups are currently confronting. The issue of intellectual property has come to the fore in recent policy debates over innovation strategy, debates which can only be answered from an interdisciplinary perspective.
This book brings together contributions from a number of academic disciplines - economics, law and sociology - as well as from practitioners in IP and as such should find a wide and receptive readership in universities, policy-circles and among patent, and academic- and industrial-liaison practitioners. Most of the contributions are based on ongoing empirical research.
Introduction. 1. Intellectual Property and the Wider Innovation System. Part One: IPR in the Innovation System. 2. The Quality of Patenting in the UK Scientific Instruments Industry. 3. Standardisation: A New Challenge for the Intellectual Property System. 4. IPR and the Pharmaceutical Industry. Part Two: Intellectual Property in the University Environment. 5. Capturing Intellectual Property Rights for the UK: A Critique of University Policies. 6. Confidentiality and Intellectual Property Rights in Research Projects and Their Effect on the Research Student. 7. Managing IPR in an Academic Environment: Capacities for and Limitation of Exploitation. Part Three: Intellectual Property and the International Context. 8. Incompletion of the European Community Market: The Problem of Extending Pharmaceutical Patent Protection. 9. Is an American Mouse (R) a European Mouse (TM)? 10. Protecting Innovation within the European Union: The Proposals for a Community Utility Model. Index.
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 1.6.1996 |
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Reihe/Serie | Nijhoff Law Specials ; 18 |
Verlagsort | Zuidpoolsingel |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 155 x 235 mm |
Gewicht | 353 g |
Einbandart | Paperback |
Themenwelt | Recht / Steuern ► EU / Internationales Recht |
Recht / Steuern ► Wirtschaftsrecht ► Urheberrecht | |
ISBN-10 | 90-411-0907-2 / 9041109072 |
ISBN-13 | 978-90-411-0907-1 / 9789041109071 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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