Intellectual property rights for crop plant material should in principle increase social welfare by increasing private research investments to a level closer to the social optimum. In the US, plant patents were first introduced in 1930 by legislation that applied only to asexually reproduced plants. This was followed in 1970 by the weaker plant breeders\u27 rights legislation (PBR) for sexually reproduced plants. Judicial decisions in 1980 and 1985, however, extended much stronger utility patent protection to plant materials. Here we examine theoretical welfare implications of weak PBR vs strong utility patents in a North-South context of technology transfer in agriculture and in the particular case of durable crop traits. The results sugge...
This paper addresses the issue of using intellectual property rights (IPRs) in public sector breedin...
This Article offers a critical reassessment of U.S. approaches to intellectual property protection...
117-123Private plant breeding has speeded up the introduction of new varieties and hybrids to impro...
Intellectual property rights for crop plant material should in principle increase social welfare by ...
198-210This paper analyses the co-evolution of scientific progress and intellectual property protect...
The paper examines the welfare impact of different intellectual property right (IPR) regimes in priv...
The paper examines the welfare impact of different intellectual property right (IPR) regimes in priv...
Both patents and Plant Breeders’ Rights (PBRs) can protect plant innovations. Unlike patents, PBRs ...
This paper illustrates the potential negative effects of increasing the scope of plant breeders' rig...
The exclusivity conferred to inventors by intellectual property rights (IPRs) provide an ex ante inc...
This paper undertakes a comparative institutional analysis of intellectual property rights (IPRs) in...
Canada has a long history of investing in agricultural research, with public funds playing a dominan...
In principle, intellectual property protections (IPPs) promote and protect important but costly inve...
If intellectual property rights (IPR) are incentives for plant research, how do they affect plant de...
This thesis examines how patent rights governing crop genetic material were structured and implement...
This paper addresses the issue of using intellectual property rights (IPRs) in public sector breedin...
This Article offers a critical reassessment of U.S. approaches to intellectual property protection...
117-123Private plant breeding has speeded up the introduction of new varieties and hybrids to impro...
Intellectual property rights for crop plant material should in principle increase social welfare by ...
198-210This paper analyses the co-evolution of scientific progress and intellectual property protect...
The paper examines the welfare impact of different intellectual property right (IPR) regimes in priv...
The paper examines the welfare impact of different intellectual property right (IPR) regimes in priv...
Both patents and Plant Breeders’ Rights (PBRs) can protect plant innovations. Unlike patents, PBRs ...
This paper illustrates the potential negative effects of increasing the scope of plant breeders' rig...
The exclusivity conferred to inventors by intellectual property rights (IPRs) provide an ex ante inc...
This paper undertakes a comparative institutional analysis of intellectual property rights (IPRs) in...
Canada has a long history of investing in agricultural research, with public funds playing a dominan...
In principle, intellectual property protections (IPPs) promote and protect important but costly inve...
If intellectual property rights (IPR) are incentives for plant research, how do they affect plant de...
This thesis examines how patent rights governing crop genetic material were structured and implement...
This paper addresses the issue of using intellectual property rights (IPRs) in public sector breedin...
This Article offers a critical reassessment of U.S. approaches to intellectual property protection...
117-123Private plant breeding has speeded up the introduction of new varieties and hybrids to impro...