scholarly journals SPECIFIC ASPECTS OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT IN THE KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-30
Author(s):  
Aurel Mihail Țîțu ◽  
◽  
Alina Bianca Pop ◽  
Camelia Oprean-Stan ◽  
Sebastian Emanuel Stan ◽  
...  

This paper addresses the issue of intellectual property management in the knowledge-based economy. The starting point in carrying out the study is the presentation of some concepts regarding in the first phase, the intellectual capital. Arguments are made that the knowledge-based economy is a challenge for the current century. The subject of intellectual property is approached through the prism of a topical concept operationalized in the current global economic context. The main institutions that are directly related to this concept are mentioned. The topic of patents related to WOS indexed scientific papers is also debated, along with a series of statistics and studies on the state of patent protection worldwide in the top fields. The last part of the paper contains the conclusions and own points of view on the debated topic.

2010 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 4-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antony Taubman

This paper seeks to set the practical discipline of public interest intellectual property (IP) management in public health into its broader policy context. The most immediate and direct impact of IP systems on public welfare results not from international standards nor from national legislation – though these norms are fundamentally important - but rather from the accumulated impact of numerous practical choices whether or not to seek IP protection; where and where not; and how any exclusive rights are deployed, by whom, and to what end. IP management is the essentially practical exercise of limited exclusive rights over protected subject matter, the judicious use of those rights to leverage outcomes that advance an institution's or a firm's objectives. Exclusive rights are used to construct and define knowledge-based relationships, to leverage access to technology and other necessary resources, and to enhance market-based incentives. IP management choices range across a broad spectrum, spanning public domain strategies, open or exclusive licensing, and strong exclusivity. The idea of ‘exclusive rights’, as a specific legal mechanism, can run counter to expectations of greater openness and accessibility, but actual outcomes will depend very much on how these mechanisms are used in practice. For public interest or public sector institutions concerned with health research and development, particularly the development of new medicines, IP management choices can be just as critical as they are for private firms, although a predominant institutional concentration on advancing direct public interest objectives may lead to significantly different approaches in weighing and exercising practical choices for IP management: even so, a private sector approach should not be conflated with exclusivity as an end in itself, nor need public interest IP management eschew all leverage over IP. This paper offers a tentative framework for a richer typology of those choices, to give a sense of practical options available and the factors that might guide their application, but without advocating any particular approach.


1991 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 228-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.V. Reed

This article looks first at the subject of technology transfer. Patent portfolio management is discussed, followed by research grants and contracts, and spin-off companies. Issues related to intellectual property management are then covered, including ownership, copyright and confidential information. The article stresses the many changes in approach that have taken place in UK universities in the last 10 years and which seem set to continue.


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