Title
Information and Intellectual Property: The Global Challenges
Author
Rishab Aiyer Ghosh, UNU-MERIT, The Netherlands, and Luc Soete, UNU-MERIT, The Netherlands
Date
11/12/2008
(Original Publish Date: 6/1/2006)
(Original Publish Date: 6/1/2006)
Abstract
The paper analyses the contribution of 'golden papers' - seminal works whose ideas remain as fresh and relevant today as when they were first published decades ago - and which continue to dominate academic discourse among successive generations of scholars. The authors analyse why two works written within an industrial development context: The simple economics of basic scientific research, by Richard Nelson (1959) and Kenneth Arrows Economic Welfare and the Allocation of Resources for Invention (1962), are so relevant in today's knowledge-driven economic paradigm. Focusing on the papers' application to current global policy debates on information/knowledge and intellectual property, they argue that while the context has changed the essential nature of innovation - driven by widespread access to the ability to replicate and improve - remains the same. Hence a focus on endogenous innovation policy is as relevant today as it was 50 years ago.
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