Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- PART I International Provision of Public Goods under a Globalized Intellectual Property Regime
- 1 The Globalization of Private Knowledge Goods and the Privatization of Global Public Goods
- 2 The Regulation of Public Goods
- Comment: Norms, Institutions, and Cooperation
- 3 Distributive Values and Institutional Design in the Provision of Global Public Goods
- 4 Koyaanisqatsi in Cyberspace: The Economics of an “Out-of-Balance” Regime of Private Property Rights in Data and Information
- 5 Linkages Between the Market Economy and the Scientific Commons
- Comment I: Public Goods and Public Science
- 6 Sustainable Access to Copyrighted Digital Information Works in Developing Countries
- 7 Agricultural Research and Intellectual Property Rights
- Comment II: Using Intellectual Property Rights to Preserve the Global Genetic Commons: The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture
- PART II Innovation and Technology Transfer in a Protectionist Environment
- PART III Sectoral Issues: Essential Medicines and Traditional Knowledge
- PART IV Reform and Regulation Issues
- Index
7 - Agricultural Research and Intellectual Property Rights
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- PART I International Provision of Public Goods under a Globalized Intellectual Property Regime
- 1 The Globalization of Private Knowledge Goods and the Privatization of Global Public Goods
- 2 The Regulation of Public Goods
- Comment: Norms, Institutions, and Cooperation
- 3 Distributive Values and Institutional Design in the Provision of Global Public Goods
- 4 Koyaanisqatsi in Cyberspace: The Economics of an “Out-of-Balance” Regime of Private Property Rights in Data and Information
- 5 Linkages Between the Market Economy and the Scientific Commons
- Comment I: Public Goods and Public Science
- 6 Sustainable Access to Copyrighted Digital Information Works in Developing Countries
- 7 Agricultural Research and Intellectual Property Rights
- Comment II: Using Intellectual Property Rights to Preserve the Global Genetic Commons: The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture
- PART II Innovation and Technology Transfer in a Protectionist Environment
- PART III Sectoral Issues: Essential Medicines and Traditional Knowledge
- PART IV Reform and Regulation Issues
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The agricultural sector can be crudely characterized as having experienced five technological revolutions. These revolutions differed in terms of timing. The origin of each revolution was in developed market economies, and each was diffused to developing economies at different rates depending on economic, soil and climate conditions and on the capacity of developing countries to innovate and imitate. Each revolution differed in the degree to which it was “science-linked” or “science-enabled.” Each revolution varied in terms of the role of the public sector in the conduct of research and development (R&D). Finally, each revolution differed in terms of the degree to which intellectual property rights (IPRs) facilitated the origin of inventions and the diffusion of innovations.
The five revolutions in chronological order of innovation timing are agricultural mechanization, agricultural chemicals, crop genetic improvements (the Green Revolution), livestock industrialization, and recombinant DNA (rDNA; the Gene Revolution). In this chapter, I describe them and analyze the ability of countries to innovate and absorb agricultural technologies. Thus, in Section 2, I discuss the degree of science linkage and the role of IPRs in each revolution. In Sections 3 and 4, I describe the Green Revolution and the Gene Revolution, respectively, in more detail. In Section 5, I develop innovation and imitation (In-Im) capacity indexes for four groups of developing countries and describe the process of diffusion of technologies from originating countries (chiefly in the OECD market economies) to developing countries.
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- International Public Goods and Transfer of Technology Under a Globalized Intellectual Property Regime , pp. 188 - 216Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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