Beginning in the early 1980s, the U.S. Government reformed the patent law in ways that made patents easier to acquire and defend, but further efforts to expand the rights of patent owners had stalled by the mid-1990s. I use a political economy model to explain these changes in terms of the shifting constituency interests represented by members of the U.S. Congress. As the distribution of patenting became less skewed in the 1980s, more members represented constituencies likely to benefit from inefficient patent policy. But as the distribution of patent holding became more skewed once again in the later 1990s, support for expansions of patent rights decreased
The government\u27s pro-patent policy may not be the best way to promote technological advances. Thi...
This paper looks more closely at the sources of patent growth in the united states since 1984. It co...
Patent law today is a complex institution in most developed economies and the appropriate structure ...
Beginning in the early 1980s, the U.S. Government reformed the patent law in ways that made patents ...
This Article approaches the research exemption, and related legal developments, as a case study in t...
As winter descended on Washington in December 1878, the Forty-fifth Congress gathered for what promi...
Since the 80’s, the pharmaceutical industry has benefited substantially from a series of policy chan...
Thesis: S.M. in Technology and Policy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Engineering,...
The literature on R&D-driven economic growth suggests that technological innovations result from ent...
Thesis: Ph. D. in Political Economy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Urban Stud...
One enduring historical debate concerns whether the American Constitution was intended to be classi...
This paper analyzes the evolution of U.S. patent law between the first patent act in 1790 and 1870, ...
Starting in the early 1980s, the U.S. patent regime experienced major changes that allowed the paten...
In the last several years, business leaders, policymakers, and inventors have complained to the medi...
The most recent push for patent reform established competing groups supporting individual agendas. I...
The government\u27s pro-patent policy may not be the best way to promote technological advances. Thi...
This paper looks more closely at the sources of patent growth in the united states since 1984. It co...
Patent law today is a complex institution in most developed economies and the appropriate structure ...
Beginning in the early 1980s, the U.S. Government reformed the patent law in ways that made patents ...
This Article approaches the research exemption, and related legal developments, as a case study in t...
As winter descended on Washington in December 1878, the Forty-fifth Congress gathered for what promi...
Since the 80’s, the pharmaceutical industry has benefited substantially from a series of policy chan...
Thesis: S.M. in Technology and Policy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, School of Engineering,...
The literature on R&D-driven economic growth suggests that technological innovations result from ent...
Thesis: Ph. D. in Political Economy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Urban Stud...
One enduring historical debate concerns whether the American Constitution was intended to be classi...
This paper analyzes the evolution of U.S. patent law between the first patent act in 1790 and 1870, ...
Starting in the early 1980s, the U.S. patent regime experienced major changes that allowed the paten...
In the last several years, business leaders, policymakers, and inventors have complained to the medi...
The most recent push for patent reform established competing groups supporting individual agendas. I...
The government\u27s pro-patent policy may not be the best way to promote technological advances. Thi...
This paper looks more closely at the sources of patent growth in the united states since 1984. It co...
Patent law today is a complex institution in most developed economies and the appropriate structure ...