Intellectual property rights and endogenous economic growth uncovering the main gaps in the research agenda
Date
2012
Embargo
Advisor
Coadvisor
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Language
English
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Abstract
Introduction
Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) are “the rights to use and sell knowledge and
inventions” (Greenhalgh and Rogers, 2007: 541), with the aim of guaranteeing adequate
returns for innovators and creators. There are different types of intellectual property
protection (Granstrand, 2005): old types such as patents, trade secrets, copyrights,
trademarks and design rights, and new forms such as breeding rights and database rights.
Nonetheless, patents are commonly considered as the most important and representative
IPR (e.g., Besen and Raskind, 1991).
IPR have a long legal and economic history, since the idea of intellectual property was
already present in ancient cultures such as Babylonia, Egypt, Greece and the Roman
Empire. Mokyr (2009) discusses the relevance of the late 19th century, when political
events created a system which supported an executive that was sufficiently well organised
to create a “rule of law” and respect private property rights. This argument
emerges, in part, in the context of an Industrial Revolution marked by important
technological improvements, whereby IPR began gradually to be accorded more respect. (...)
Keywords
Intellectual property rights, Endogenous economic growth
Document Type
Book part
Publisher Version
10.5772/37768
Dataset
Citation
Azevedo, M. L., Silva, S. T., & Afonso, O. (2012). Intellectual property rights and endogenous economic growth uncovering the main gaps in the research agenda. In A. A. C. Teixeira (editor), Technological Change (chapter 3, pp. 45-64). DOI:10.5772/37768. Disponível no Repositório UPT, http://hdl.handle.net/11328/1900
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Open Access