Motives and Functions of Patenting in Public Basic Science

Motives and Functions of Patenting in Public Basic Science

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Taking German public basic research as an example, this book explores how the ongoing implementation of knowledge and technology transfer as the Third Mission of academic science creates not only new incentives for academic patenting, but also triggers new patenting motives and strategies of researchers and organizations. Analyzing these motives and strategies, the book highlights how the complex regulatory interplay of the patent system, research policy and self-governed academic communities creates a situation in which new patent functions emerge: beyond their intended function as a protection for upstream inventions, patents become a signaling device for scientists to communicate their commitment and competence in the Third Mission. As an exploratory study, this book combines qualitative empirical research with concepts and insights from multiple fields such as economics, law, political sciences and regulation. In consequence, the book addresses anyone interested in patenting incentives and motives and their impact on the functional change and regulatory effectiveness of patents in polycentric regulatory environments.

Introduction
Methodology
Theory: Community Governance and Patenting in Science
Policy Analysis: Patenting for the Third Mission
Empirics: Patenting Motives in Basic Science
Synthesis: Contextual Patent Functions
Summary


ISBN 978-3-658-33121-4
Article number 9783658331214
Media type Book
Edition number 1st ed. 2021
Copyright year 2021
Publisher Springer, Berlin
Length XIX, 272 pages
Illustrations XIX, 272 p. 63 illus.
Language English