Fr. 280.00

Expanding the Boundaries of Intellectual Property

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext Clearly written ... carefully constructed arguments ... high quality writing pervades virtually the whole book ... There are many volumes that deal with the knowledge economy; few however present such a wide and challenging selection of ideas ... thought provoking insight into the future of intellectual property ... the book's overall strength lies in its ability to open new insights into this important legal area. Informationen zum Autor Professor Dreyfuss was the director of the Engelberg Center on Innovation Law and Policy, which sponsors interdisciplinary research on questions concerning the allocation of global resources to creative enterprises. Her research and teaching interests include intellectual property, privacy, the relationship between science and law, and civil procedure.Diane Leenheer Zimmerman is Samuel Tilden Professor of Law at New York University School of Law. She writes about first amendment, women's rights and intellectual property issues. She lectures frequently in the United States and abroad on copyright, innovation policy and theory, libel, privacy, commercial speech, the regulation of pornography, and other issues.Harry First joined the faculty of New York University School of Law in 1976, where he currently teaches. He is Charles L. Denison Professor of law, as well as Director of the Trade Regulation Programme. Klappentext Many countries have already agreed to accept minimum standards of intellectual property protection and enforcement. But how much control should innovators exercise over their creative works or inventions? This new collection of essays analyzes and develops this issue, which has assumed considerable importance in our new knowledge-based economy. Zusammenfassung The majority of countries in the world have agreed to accept minimum standards of intellectual property protection and enforcement - the issue is how much control innovators should have over their creative works or inventions. The contributors to this book analyse and develop this issue. Inhaltsverzeichnis PART I: EXPANDING THE PRIVATE DOMAIN 1: F.M. Scherer: The Innovation Lottery 2: Jerome H. Reichman: Of Green Tulips and Legal Kudzu: Repackaging Rights in Subpatentable Innovation 3: Jane C. Ginsburg: U.S. Initiatives to Protect Works of Low Authorship PART II: THE GROWTH OF PRIVATE ORDERING REGIMES 4: Carl Shapiro: Setting Compatibility Standards: Cooperation or Collusion? 5: Kenneth W. Dam: Self-Help in the Digital Jungle 6: Robert P. Merges: Institutions for Intellectual Property Transactions: The Case of Patent Pools 7: Bennett M. Lincoff: A Plan for the Future of Music Performance Rights Organizations in the Digital Age PART III: THE CLAIMS OF THE PUBLIC DOMAIN 8: Niva Elkin-Koren: A Public-Regarding Approach to Contracting Over Copyrights 9: Rebecca S. Eisenberg: Bargaining over the Transfer of Proprietary Research Tools: Is this Market Failing or Emerging? 10: Walter W. Powell: Networks of Learning in Biotechnology: Opportunities and Constraints Associated with Relational Contracting in a Knowledge-Intensive Field 11: Yochai Benkler: A Political Economy of the Public Domain: Markets in Information Goods vs. the Marketplace of Ideas PART IV: IMPLEMENTING INNOVATION POLICY FOR THE INFORMATION AGE 12: Thomas Dreier: Balancing Proprietary and Public Domain Interests: Inside or Outside of Proprietary Rights? 13: Susan DeSanti (with William Cohen, Nancy Dickinson, and Michael Fanelli): Competition to Innovate: Strategies for Proper Antitrust Assessments 14: Bernt Hugenholtz: Copyright and Freedom of Expression in Europe 15: Hanns Ullrich: Intellectual Property, Access to Information and Antitrust: Harmony, Disharmony and International Harmonization PART V: VIEWS FROM THE BENCH 16: Frank H. Easterbrook: Who Decides the Extent of Rights in Intellectual Property? ...

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