Knowledge Management and Intellectual Property: Concepts, Actors and Practices from the Past to the Present

Author:   Stathis Arapostathis ,  Graham Dutfield
Publisher:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
ISBN:  

9780857934383


Pages:   320
Publication Date:   30 August 2013
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Knowledge Management and Intellectual Property: Concepts, Actors and Practices from the Past to the Present


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Author:   Stathis Arapostathis ,  Graham Dutfield
Publisher:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Imprint:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.608kg
ISBN:  

9780857934383


ISBN 10:   0857934384
Pages:   320
Publication Date:   30 August 2013
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Contents: Introduction Stathis Arapostathis and Graham Dutfield PART I: INNOVATION CULTURES AND KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT 1. 'Claim the Earth': Protecting Edison's Inventions at Home and Abroad Paul Israel 2. Managing Invention: Setting the Boundaries of Ownership Andrea R. Maestrejuan 3. The Photographic Paper that Made Leo Baekeland's Reputation: Entrepreneurial Incentives for not Patenting Joris Mercelis 4. Software Piracy: Not necessarily Evil - or its Role in Software Development in Greece Theodore Lekkas PART II: INDIVIDUALS, INSTITUTIONS AND THE MANAGEMENT OF INTANGIBLE ASSETS 5. Collective Invention and Patent Law Individualism, 1877-2012 - or, the Curious Persistence of Inventor's Moral Right Graham Dutfield 6. Something in the Air: The Post Office and Early Wireless, 1882-1899 Elizabeth Bruton 7. Contested Inventors: British Patent Disputes and the Culture of Invention in the Late Nineteenth Century Stathis Arapostathis 8. From Colour TV War to Non-Aggression Pact: Patents as Actants of Techno-political Diplomacy in a European Standardization Process Andreas Fickers PART III: KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT AND THE INDUSTRY-STATE-ACADEMIA NEXUS 9. Commerce and Academe: American Universities as Hosts of Entrepreneurial Science, 1880-1920 Susan W. Morris 10. Managing Knowledge in 'Systematised Plant Breeding': Mendelism and British Agricultural Science, 1900-1930 Berris Charnley 11. Patenting the Atom: The Controversial Management of State Secrecy and Intellectual Property Rights in Atomic Research Simone Turchetti PART IV: TECHNO-SCIENCES AND GLOBAL IP REGIMES: FROM HISTORY TO PRESENT CONCERNS 12. The International Patent System and the Ethics of Global Justice Henk van den Belt and Michiel Korthals 13. Intellectual Property Rights in the Plant Sciences and Development Goals in Agriculture: An Historical Perspective Niels Louwaars, Bram de Jonge and Peter Munyi 14. Business TRIPS: American Corporations and Patents Head to the Global South, 1950-2010 Eda Kranakis Index

Reviews

'Arapostathis and Dutfield's rich and well-edited collection offers a cogent challenge to patent-centred views of innovation. Their seventeen authors persuasively show that patenting is just one of a repertoire of tools successfully used to protect innovative work in a broad variety of context-dependent ways. It is essential reading for anyone wanting to learn about past contingencies in the transformation of techno-scientific creativity into wealth.' -- Graeme Gooday, University of Leeds, UK 'Essential reading, not just for IP historians and lawyers, but for anyone concerned at the insidious corporate take-over of modern life. It explodes the fallacy that patent systems exist to safeguard inventors' interests: the 20th Century saw inventors become salaried corporate employees, universities adopt a model of academic entrepreneurship, and IPRs create their own, increasingly global, logic. Yet, from Left and Right now arise fundamental ethical questions: isn't intellectual property just legal chicanery; shouldn't knowledge be a universal, public good?' -- Christine MacLeod, University of Bristol, UK


’Arapostathis and Dutfield's rich and well-edited collection offers a cogent challenge to patent-centred views of innovation. Their seventeen authors persuasively show that patenting is just one of a repertoire of tools successfully used to protect innovative work in a broad variety of context-dependent ways. It is essential reading for anyone wanting to learn about past contingencies in the transformation of techno-scientific creativity into wealth.’ - Graeme Gooday, University of Leeds, UK Essential reading, not just for IP historians and lawyers, but for anyone concerned at the insidious corporate take-over of modern life. It explodes the fallacy that patent systems exist to safeguard inventors' interests: the 20th Century saw inventors become salaried corporate employees, universities adopt a model of academic entrepreneurship, and IPRs create their own, increasingly global, logic. Yet, from Left and Right now arise fundamental ethical questions: isn't intellectual property just legal chicanery; shouldn't knowledge be a universal, public good?’ - Christine MacLeod, University of Bristol, UK


Author Information

Edited by Stathis Arapostathis, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece and Graham Dutfield, University of Leeds, UK

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