Merges (1999) - Institutions For Intellectual Property Transactions

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Reference

  • Merges, Robert P (1999), "Institutions for intellectual property transactions: the case of patent pools", University of California at Berkeley Working Paper
@article{merges1999institutions,
  title={Institutions for intellectual property transactions: the case of patent pools},
  author={Merges, Robert P},
  journal={University of California at Berkeley Working Paper},
  year={1999},
  abstract={In this Chapter I hope to accomplish three things: briefly summarize trends in the economic theory of intellectual property rights (IPRs); describe some ideas of my own on the emergence of IPR exchange institutions, and describe how an emphasis on institutions fits into existing theory; and ground these issues in a discussion of collective IPR licensing, in particular, patent pools. I begin with a discussion of how transactions have crept into IP theory, and then turn to an examination of actual institutions that have evolved out of the need for various industries to conduct a large volume of IPR transactions.},
  discipline={Law},
  research_type={Discussion},
  industry={High-tech},
  thicket_stance={},
  thicket_stance_extract={},
  thicket_def={},
  thicket_def_extract={},  
  tags={Pools},
  filename={Merges (1999) - Institutions For Intellectual Property Transactions.pdf}
}

File(s)

Abstract

In this Chapter I hope to accomplish three things: briefly summarize trends in the economic theory of intellectual property rights (IPRs); describe some ideas of my own on the emergence of IPR exchange institutions, and describe how an emphasis on institutions fits into existing theory; and ground these issues in a discussion of collective IPR licensing, in particular, patent pools. I begin with a discussion of how transactions have crept into IP theory, and then turn to an examination of actual institutions that have evolved out of the need for various industries to conduct a large volume of IPR transactions.