Accessing other people's technology
Public and private nonprofit institutions worldwide engaged in agricultural research and biotechnology are increasingly active participants in intellectual property transactions, interacting with the for-profit sector and even spawning private entities of their own. Notably absent from the group of...
| Main Authors: | , , |
|---|---|
| Format: | Brief |
| Language: | Inglés |
| Published: |
International Food Policy Research Institute
2003
|
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/156909 |
Similar Items: Accessing other people's technology
- Accessing other people's technology: do non-profit agencies need it? how to obtain it?
- Plants and intellectual property: an international appraisal
- Intellectual property and developing countries: freedom to operate in agricultural biotechnology
- South-North trade, intellectual property jurisdictions, and freedom to operate in agricultural research on staple crops
- South-North trade, intellectual property jurisdictions, and freedom to operate in agricultural research on staple crops
- Creating, protecting, and using crop biotechnologies worldwide in an era of intellectual property