Normal view MARC view ISBD view

Intellectual Property Innovation – Volume-I / edited by Shubha Ghosh

Contributor(s): Ghosh, Shubha, ed.
Material type: TextTextSeries: Critical Concepts in Intellectual Property Law 14.Publisher: Cheltenham, United Kingdom Edward Elgar Publishing Limited 2017Description: xxi, 860p. : ill. ; 25cm; Volume-I.ISBN: 9781785366253.Subject(s): Intellectual property; United States; InnovationsDDC classification: 346.048 GHO Online resources: Click here to access online
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Item type Current location Collection Call number Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Reference Book Reference Book VIT AP School of Law
LAW Section
Reference 346.048 GHO (Browse shelf) LA01654 Not for loan LAW 020506

It includes Acknowledgement and Introduction Pages.

Description:
This illuminating two-volume collection presents leading articles on the theory and practice of intellectual property law as it applies to the promotion of innovation in economic, social, and legal dimensions. Topics include the role of law and incentives, cumulative and open forms of innovation, as well as discussion of its social dimensions, relationship with market institutions and how to chart a course for future innovation policy. Together with an original introduction by the editor, this collection offers a compelling overview of the ideas that ignite and enliven innovation scholarship, invaluable to academics and policymakers alike.

Contents:
Volume -I

Introduction Shubha Ghosh

PART I INTRODUCTION: THE CONCEPT OF INNOVATION AND THE ROLE OF LAW
1. Robert P. Merges and Richard R. Nelson (1990), ‘On the Complex Economics of Patent Scope’, Columbia Law Review, 90 (4), May, 839–916

2. Brett Frischmann (2000), ’Innovation and Institutions: Rethinking the Economics of U.S. Science and Technology Policy’, Vermont Law Review, 24, Fall, 347–416

3. Robert Cooter (2005), ‘Innovation, Information, and the Poverty of Nations’, Florida State University Law Review, 33 (2), Winter, 373–93

4. Ronald J. Gilson, Charles F. Sabel and Robert E. Scott (2013), ‘Contract and Innovation: The Limited Role of Generalist Courts in the Evolution of Novel Contractual Forms’, New York University Law Review, 88 (3), April, 170–215

5. Katherine J. Strandburg (2009), ‘Evolving Innovation Paradigms and the Global Intellectual Property Regime’, Connecticut Law Review, 41 (3), February, 861–920

PART II INCENTIVES, LAW AND INNOVATION
6. Amy L. Landers (2006), ‘Let the Games Begin: Incentives to Innovation in the New Economy of Intellectual Property Law’, Santa Clara Law Review, 46 (2), 307–75

7. Jonathan B. Baker (2007), ‘Beyond Schumpeter vs. Arrow: How Antitrust Fosters Innovation’, Antitrust Law Journal, 74 (3), 575–602
8. Giovanni Dosi, Luigi Marengo and Corrado Pasquali (2007), ‘Knowledge, Competition and Innovation: Is Strong IPR Protection Really Needed for More and Better Innovations?’, Michigan Telecommunications and Technology Law Review, 13 (2), Spring, 471–85

9. Petra Moser (2012), ‘Innovation without Patents: Evidence from World’s Fairs’, Journal of Law and Economics, 55 (1), February, 43–74

10. Dotan Oliar (2012), ‘The Copyright-Innovation Tradeoff: Property Rules, Liability Rules, and Intentional Infliction of Harm’, Stanford Law Review, 64 (4), April, 951–1020

11. Ted Sichelman (2010), ‘Commercializing Patents’, Stanford Law Review, 62 (2), January, 341–413

12. Thomas Cheng (2013), ‘Putting Innovation Incentives Back in the Patent-Antitrust Interface’, Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property, 11 (5), April, 385–439

13. Murat C. Mungan (2014), ‘Less Protection, More Innovation?’, Supreme Court Economic Review, 22 (1), January, 123–46

14. Lisa Larrimore Ouellette (2015), ‘Patentable Subject Matter and Nonpatent Innovation Incentives’, UC Irvine Law Review, 5 (5), December, 1115–45

PART III CUMULATIVE AND OPEN INNOVATION
15. Clarisa Long (2000), ‘Patents and Cumulative Innovation’, Washington University Journal of Law and Policy, Re-Engineering Patent Law: The Challenge of New Technologies, 2, January, 229–46

16. Joel West (2009), ‘Policy Challenges of Open, Cumulative, and User Innovation’, Washington University Journal of Law and Policy: Open Source and Proprietary Models of Innovation, 30, 17–41

17. Keith Sawyer (2009), ‘The Collaborative Nature of Innovation’, Washington University Journal of Law and Policy: Open Source and Proprietary Models of Innovation, 30, 293–324

18. Chidi Oguamanam (2013), ‘Open Innovation in Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture’, Chicago-Kent Journal of Intellectual Property, 13 (1), 11–50

19. Clark D. Asay (2015), ‘Enabling Patentless Innovation’, Maryland Law Review, 74 (3), 431–95

There are no comments for this item.

Log in to your account to post a comment.

Visitor Number:

Powered by Koha