Home        Login
 
 
 
Home >  UK & USA  >  Innovation Without Patents



Innovation Without Patents

By Uma Suthersanen, Graham Dutfield and Kit Boey Chow

Clearly written in an accessible style, this book brings together economic thinking on innovation and legal thinking on unpatentable invention and sets them in the context of the legal systems in countries in various parts of the world. Its great merit is the emphasis on empirical and institutional analysis of theory and practice. It should inform IP policy-making everywhere. – Ruth Towse, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands

This book asks whether or not protecting unpatentable innovation is a good idea, especially for developing countries. Edited by well-known specialists from the Queen Mary IP Institute and the Singapore IP Academy, who have included their own substantial contributions, the work contains a number of valuable empirical studies by national experts mainly from the Far East and Latin America on the operation of national utility models and other similar schemes designed to protect innovation outside the patent system. The book is essential reading for lawyers, economists, policy makers and NGOs concerned with how best to encourage national and regional innovation and economic prosperity. – David Vaver, University of Oxford, UK

Focusing on innovation and development, this book, easy to read and full of interesting detail, provides both valuable insight into the theoretical framework of innovation as supported by intellectual property protection and contains valuable case studies of national systems of innovation in the Pacific Rim States. – Thomas Dreier, University of Karlsruhe, Germany

This book is concerned with the extent to which innovations should or should not be protected as intellectual property, and the implications this has upon the ability of local manufacturers to learn to innovate.

A question the book considers is how far legal protection should extend to inventions that may only just, or indeed not quite, meet the conventional criteria for patentability, in terms of the level of inventiveness. Innovation without Patents offers a thoughtful and empirically rich analysis of the current system in a number of developed and developing countries in the Asia-Pacific. It asks whether such innovations should remain free from patenting, or whether alternative intellectual property regimes should be offered in such cases, and indeed whether the requirements change depending on a country’s level of development. This discussion is capped by a number of proposed policy options.

The theoretical and practical approaches to intellectual property rights, innovation and development policy formulation make Innovation without Patents accessible to academics, national and regional patent offices, national overseas development agencies, NGOs and patent attorneys.

Published Year: 2007
Format: Hard Back
ISBN: 978 1 84542 959 1
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
No of Pages: 224

Our Price: £ 53.96

Reviews: 0 reivew(s).

Add to Wish List

Tell a Friend

Write a Review

Add your review
If you are a Reviewer group member please login before writing any comments
Name
Country
Rating
Comments
Type the characters you see in the picture
antibot_image
Get a different code
Send to Friend
Name
Your Email
Recipient Email
Place an Order
 
Quantity