Intellectual Property Rights, Development, and Catch Up: An International Comparative Study

Author:   Hiroyuki Odagiri (Professor, Faculty of Social Innovation, Seijo University, Tokyo) ,  Akira Goto (Professor Emeritus, University of Tokyo) ,  Atsushi Sunami (Director of Science and Technology Policy Program and Associate Professor, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies) ,  Richard R. Nelson (George Blumenthal Professor of International and Public Affairs, Emeritus, Columbia University, and Visiting Professor, University of Manchester)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780199639632


Pages:   464
Publication Date:   02 February 2012
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Intellectual Property Rights, Development, and Catch Up: An International Comparative Study


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Author:   Hiroyuki Odagiri (Professor, Faculty of Social Innovation, Seijo University, Tokyo) ,  Akira Goto (Professor Emeritus, University of Tokyo) ,  Atsushi Sunami (Director of Science and Technology Policy Program and Associate Professor, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies) ,  Richard R. Nelson (George Blumenthal Professor of International and Public Affairs, Emeritus, Columbia University, and Visiting Professor, University of Manchester)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 17.30cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 23.90cm
Weight:   0.708kg
ISBN:  

9780199639632


ISBN 10:   0199639639
Pages:   464
Publication Date:   02 February 2012
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

1: Hiroyuki Odagiri, Akira Goto, Atsushi Sunami, and Richard R. Nelson: Introduction Part I: Early Developing Countries 2: David C. Mowery: IPR and US Economic Catch-Up 3: Kristine Bruland: Knowledge Flows and Catching-Up Industrialization in the Nordic Countries: The Roles of Patent Systems 4: Hiroyuki Odagiri, Akira Goto, and Atsushi Sunami: Catch-Up Process in Japan and the IPR System Part II: Post-World War II Developing Countries 5: Keun Lee and Yee Kyoung Kim: IPR and Technological Catch-Up in Korea 6: H. L. Wu, Y. C. Chiu, and T. L. Lee: IPRs Regime and Catch-Up: The Taiwanese Experience 7: Meir Pugatch, Morris Teubal, and Odeda Zlotnick: Israel's High Tech Catch-Up Process: The Role of IPR and Other Policies Part III: Latin America 8: Andres Lopez: Innovation and IPR in a Catch-Up-Falling-Behind Process: The Argentine Case 9: Roberto Mazzoleni and Luciano Martins Costa Povoa: Accumulation of Technological Capabilities and Economic Development: Did Brazil's IPR Regime Matter? Part IV: Asia 10: Lan Xue and Zheng Liang: Relationships between IPR and Technology Catch-Up: Some Evidences from China 11: Bhaven N. Sampat: The Accumulation of Capabilities in Indian Pharmaceuticals and Software: The Roles that Patents Did (and Did Not) Play 12: Patarapong Intarakamnerd and Peera Charoenporn: The Roles of IPR Regime on Thailand's Technological Catching-Up 13: Hiroyuki Odagiri, Akira Goto, Atsushi Sunami, and Richard R. Nelson: Conclusion

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Hiroyuki Odagiri studied at Kyoto University (B.A.), Osaka University (M.A.) and Northwestern University (Ph.D.) and, since 1998, has been teaching at the Department of Economics, Hitotsubashi University, Japan. His fields of specialization are the theory of the firm, industrial organization, and economic studies of innovation. He has written numerous books and journal papers in English and Japanese. Among the books published in English are The Theory of Growth in a Corporate Economy (Cambridge University Press, 1981), which was awarded a Nikkei Award to Economic Literature in Japan; Growth through Competition, Competition through Growth (Oxford University Press, 1992); and Technology and Industrial Development in Japan (Oxford University Press, 1996, co-authored with A. Goto). His Japanese books include Economics of the Firm (Toyo Keizai, 2000), Modern Industrial Organization (Yuhikaku, 2001), and The Economics of Biotechnology (Toyo Keizai, 2006). Professor Goto is a Commissioner of Fair Trade Commission of the Government of Japan, and an Emeritus Professor of the University of Tokyo. His expertise covers economics of competition policy and economics of innovation. Prior to joining the University of Tokyo, Professor Goto taught at Hitotsubashi University and Seikei University. In addition, he had held visiting positions at Yale University, Oxford University, Australian National University and the OECD. His major works include 'R&D Capital, Rate of Return on R&D Investment and Spillover of R&D in Japanese Manufacturing Industries' (Review of Economics and Statistics, with Kazuyuki Suzuki), Competition Policy in a Global Economy, (ed. with W. Comanor and L. Waverman, Routledge, 1996), Innovation in Japan, (ed. with H.Odagiri), Oxford University Press, 1997, and 'Japan's National Innovation System: Current Status and Problems', (Oxford Review of Economic Policy). Atsushi Sunami is an Associate Professor and Director of the Science and Technology Program at National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Japan. He is also Affiliated Fellow of National Institute of Science and Technology Policy (Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology), a co-director of the Japan Research Center at Beijing University, and a deputy-director of the China Research Center of Japan Science and Technology Agency. He also serves on the advisory committee on international affairs for the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology. His research has concentrated on a comparative analysis of national innovation systems with particular focus on China and India, and an evolutionary approach in science and technology policy-making process. Along with Akira Goto and Tatsuo Tanaka, he translated An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change?, by Richard R. Nelson and Sidney G. Winter. Richard R. Nelson is heads the program on Science, Technology, and Global Development, at the Columbia Earth Institute, and is George Blumenthal Professor of International and Public Affairs, Business, and Law, at Columbia, Emeritus, and Visiting Professor at the University of Manchester. His central interests have been in long-run economic change. Much of his research has been directed toward understanding technological change, how economic institutions and public policies influence the evolution of technology, and how technological change in turn induces institutional and economic change more broadly. His work has been both empirical and theoretical. With Sidney Winter, he has pioneered in trying to develop a way of economic theorizing that recognizes explicitly that the economy is almost always undergoing change, most of it unpredictable. His book with Winter, An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change, is widely recognized as a landmark in this field.

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