This article will use the NIH patent controversy as a focal point for considering when the results of government-sponsored research should be patented and when they should be dedicated to the public domain. First, this article will review the recent history of federal government policy on patenting the results of government-sponsored research. Next, this article will highlight some of the complexities involved in achieving technology transfer from the public sector to the private sector that current policy may oversimplify. With this background, this article will return to a more detailed analysis of the NIH cDNA patenting controversy and consider the lessons it may hold for technology transfer policy generally
While it may seem that genomic innovations recently burst upon the scene but they have actually been...
This paper measures the impact of public R&D investments on innovation by private sector firms. ...
"This report examines the use of intellectual property rights in Federal technology transfer, focusi...
This article will use the NIH patent controversy as a focal point for considering when the results o...
The government\u27s pro-patent policy may not be the best way to promote technological advances. Thi...
This article revisits the logical and empirical basis for current government patent policy in order ...
Federal policy since 1980 has reflected an increasingly confident presumption that patenting discove...
Professor Eisenberg argues against a system providing for federally-sponsored inventions to be paten...
This Comment will address the conflict between the U.S. patent laws and biotechnology by focusing on...
Technology transfer is the process of transforming basic scientific discoveries into commercial prod...
The increasing promise of federal funding for mapping and sequencing the human genome has brought wi...
The various research efforts that comprise the Human Genome Project will inevitably both draw on and...
Mr. Rudolph reviews approximately thirteen years of legal and political developments that have contr...
The patenting of human genes has been the focus of intense policy debate. The concerns associated wi...
Intellectual property rights such as patents protect new inventions from imitation and competition. ...
While it may seem that genomic innovations recently burst upon the scene but they have actually been...
This paper measures the impact of public R&D investments on innovation by private sector firms. ...
"This report examines the use of intellectual property rights in Federal technology transfer, focusi...
This article will use the NIH patent controversy as a focal point for considering when the results o...
The government\u27s pro-patent policy may not be the best way to promote technological advances. Thi...
This article revisits the logical and empirical basis for current government patent policy in order ...
Federal policy since 1980 has reflected an increasingly confident presumption that patenting discove...
Professor Eisenberg argues against a system providing for federally-sponsored inventions to be paten...
This Comment will address the conflict between the U.S. patent laws and biotechnology by focusing on...
Technology transfer is the process of transforming basic scientific discoveries into commercial prod...
The increasing promise of federal funding for mapping and sequencing the human genome has brought wi...
The various research efforts that comprise the Human Genome Project will inevitably both draw on and...
Mr. Rudolph reviews approximately thirteen years of legal and political developments that have contr...
The patenting of human genes has been the focus of intense policy debate. The concerns associated wi...
Intellectual property rights such as patents protect new inventions from imitation and competition. ...
While it may seem that genomic innovations recently burst upon the scene but they have actually been...
This paper measures the impact of public R&D investments on innovation by private sector firms. ...
"This report examines the use of intellectual property rights in Federal technology transfer, focusi...