Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Central Library General Section | 346.730486 FAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 038761 |
No cover image available | No cover image available | |||||||
346.730482 BUT Copyright for teachers and librarians in the 21st century | 346.730482 TUS Complex copyright : | 346.730486 COH Patents in the knowledge-based economy / | 346.730486 FAR Patents for power : | 346.730486 JAF Innovations and its discontents | 346.730488 SUG Gray markets : | 346.73066 KIE Perspectives on corporate governance / |
Introduction -- The International Relations of Intellectual Property Protection -- Intellectual Property and the US Defense Industrial Base -- Intellectual Property in Defense in Comparative Context -- Intellectual Property and the Arms Trade -- Intellectual Property, Industrial Espionage, and Cyber Security.
"In this book the authors examine how the frameworks of intellectual property law shape the ways states create, acquire, and transmit defense technology. They begin by detailing the unique interface of state security concerns with intellectual property rights, with particular focus on patents and trade secrets. A comparative historical analysis traces the differences between American and Soviet approaches to military intellectual property during the Cold War, studying the benefits and drawbacks of each, and illustrating the ways that ideologically informed property regimes cultivated innovation, and contributed to control and diffusion of military technology. They then look at more contemporary policies about military technology and disputes between the United States and South Korea as well as between the Chinese and Russians over allegations of "stealing" military technology. They argue that the efforts of the Americans to protect technology through the intellectual property system might in fact assist other countries in obtaining critical technology"--
There are no comments on this title.