Boekhandel Douwes Den Haag

Initiative for Policy Dialogue

Intellectual Property Rights

Legal and Economic Challenges for Development

Ruth L. (William L. Prosser Professor of Law, William L. Prosser Professor of Law, University of Minnesota Law School) Okediji & Giovanni (Professor of Economics and Director, Professor of Economics and Director, Institute of Economics, Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies, Pisa) Dosi & Mario (Director of the Production; Professor of Economics, Director of the Production; Professor of Economics, Productivity and Management Division at UN-ECLAC; University of Venice Ca' Foscari) Cimoli & Keith E. (Professor of Economics, Professor of Economics, University of Colorado Boulder) Maskus

Intellectual Property Rights

Initiative for Policy Dialogue

Intellectual Property Rights

Legal and Economic Challenges for Development

Initiative for Policy Dialogue: Intellectual Property Rights

 

A volume on intellectual property rights, economic development, technical change, and innovation dynamics and learning. It considers implications of IP rights and regimes on learning and innovation in developing countries and on the effects on technical change on national growth strategies.


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Beschrijving Initiative for Policy Dialogue: Intellectual Property Rights

In recent years, Intellectual Property Rights - both in the form of patents and copyrights - have expanded in their coverage, the breadth and depth of protection, and the tightness of their enforcement. Moreover, for the first time in history, the IPR regime has become increasingly uniform at international level by means of the TRIPS agreement, irrespectively of the degrees of development of the various countries.

This volume, first, addresses from different angles the effects of IPR on the processes of innovation and innovation diffusion in general, and with respect to developing countries in particular. Contrary to a widespread view, there is very little evidence that the rates of innovation increase with the tightness of IPR even in developed countries. Conversely, in many circumstances, tight IPR represents an obstacle to imitation and innovation diffusion in developing countries.

What can policies do then? This is the second major theme of the book which offers several detailed discussions of possible policy measures even within the current TRIPS regime - including the exploitation of the waivers to IPR enforcement that it contains, various forms of development of 'technological commons', and non-patent rewards to innovators, such as prizes. Some drawbacks of the regimes, however, are unavoidable: hence the advocacy in many contributions to the book of deep reforms of
the system in both developed and developing countries, including the non-patentability of scientific discoveries, the reduction of the depth and breadth of IPR patents, and the variability of the degrees of IPR protection according to the levels of a country's development.


ISBN
9780199660766
Pagina's
544
Verschenen
Serie
Initiative for Policy Dialogue
NUR
781
Druk
1
Uitvoering
Paperback / softback
Taal
Engels
Uitgever
OUP Oxford

Algemene economie