JEL Classification: O31; H42International audienceIn knowledge economies, patent agencies are often viewed as a relevant instrument of an efficient innovation policy. This paper brings a new support to that idea. We claim that these agencies should play an increasing role in the regulation of the relation between private R&D labs and public fundamental research units especially concerning the question of the appropriation of free usable research results. Since these two institutions work with opposite institutional arrangements (see P.S. Dasgupta and P.A. David. 1987. Information disclosure and the economics of science and technology. In Arrow and the accent of modern economic theory, ed. G.R. Feiwel, 519–42. New York: State University of N...
The past decade has witnessed a second academic revolution with the new role of contributing to econ...
Trabajo presentado en la EU-SPRI 2015 Conference ("Innovation policies for economic and social trans...
To foster innovation and growth should basic research be publicly or privately funded? This paper s...
In knowledge economies, patent agencies are often viewed as a relevant instrument of an efficient in...
The Bayh-Dole Act of 1980 provided U.S. universities with the right to commercialize employees' inve...
The pressure to extract rents from academic research results has led many universities to file more ...
This paper surveys the literature on university patenting. From the point of view of the economic th...
This paper exploits a particular facet of the US patent system, which thus far has been overlooked i...
Academic science, once relatively insulated from market forces, has seen the Mertonian ideal of comm...
Until recently, universities promoted social and economic progress by placing research outputs in th...
In the past, for universities, the suggestion that they rather than other, commercial, actors should...
to be fully applied, must often be privately owned. In keeping with this logic, universities have be...
The purpose of this paper is to assess the impact of patent regulation in universities in Germany an...
A series of technology transfer policies formalized the trend of universities involving in commercia...
Starting in the early 1980s, the U.S. patent regime experienced major changes that allowed the paten...
The past decade has witnessed a second academic revolution with the new role of contributing to econ...
Trabajo presentado en la EU-SPRI 2015 Conference ("Innovation policies for economic and social trans...
To foster innovation and growth should basic research be publicly or privately funded? This paper s...
In knowledge economies, patent agencies are often viewed as a relevant instrument of an efficient in...
The Bayh-Dole Act of 1980 provided U.S. universities with the right to commercialize employees' inve...
The pressure to extract rents from academic research results has led many universities to file more ...
This paper surveys the literature on university patenting. From the point of view of the economic th...
This paper exploits a particular facet of the US patent system, which thus far has been overlooked i...
Academic science, once relatively insulated from market forces, has seen the Mertonian ideal of comm...
Until recently, universities promoted social and economic progress by placing research outputs in th...
In the past, for universities, the suggestion that they rather than other, commercial, actors should...
to be fully applied, must often be privately owned. In keeping with this logic, universities have be...
The purpose of this paper is to assess the impact of patent regulation in universities in Germany an...
A series of technology transfer policies formalized the trend of universities involving in commercia...
Starting in the early 1980s, the U.S. patent regime experienced major changes that allowed the paten...
The past decade has witnessed a second academic revolution with the new role of contributing to econ...
Trabajo presentado en la EU-SPRI 2015 Conference ("Innovation policies for economic and social trans...
To foster innovation and growth should basic research be publicly or privately funded? This paper s...