...provides an accessible yet in depth text on intellectual property, detailing patents, copyright and antitrust law and what impact they can have on innovation.
Donna Gundry, Managing Information
On their broadest level, the IP and antitrust laws aim to increase societal welfare. But they do so in different ways. The foundation of the IP system is the right to exclude. This right allows inventors to recover their investment costs and to obtain profits. Relatedly, it discourages "free riders" who imitate the invention and - because they have no investment costs to recover - undercut the price. The right to exclude, in short, is designed to increase innovation. The very exclusion at the heart of IP nonetheless might seem suspicious to antitrust, which focuses on harms to competition. The antitrust laws presume that competition leads to lower prices, higher output, and more innovation. They anticipate that certain agreements between competitors or conduct by monopolists prevents consumers from enjoying these benefits. In Innovation in the 21st Century: Harnessing the Power of Intellectual Property and Antitrust Law, Michael Carrier contends that intellectual property and antitrust, the two most important laws fostering innovation, are not being used most effectively to achieve this goal and offers various proposals that individually and collectively remedy this deficiency.
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INTRODUCTION; PART I: PRIMER; PART II: COPYRIGHT; PART III: PATENT; PART IV: ANTITRUST; CONCLUSION
"Michael Carrier's Innovation for the 21st Century is sure to be an influential book in the area of intellectual property and competition policy. Carrier does an excellent job of summarizing the problems of IP and proposes workable solutions that come from both competition law and the IP laws themselves. Unlike many of the books and articles that fault the patent system in particular, but offer little in the way of a solution, Carrier asserts strong, creative
ideas for reform. He offers ten specific proposals in the areas of antitrust, patents and copyright to make the competition policy/intellectual property system encourage innovation. This book will give
law makers, judges, academics, students and all readers interested in innovation and competition policy a great deal to think about."
--Herbert Hovenkamp,
The University of Iowa College of Law
"Michael Carrier's new book is an innovation in itself. Many scholars write about antitrust, or patent, or copyright law, each one an area of specialization. What Carrier does is to combine these three fields to create a fourth-innovation law and policy. To do this, Carrier not only lucidly describes each of these three fields but, drawing on current social science theory, shows how legal doctrines in each of these fields should be interpreted to promote
innovation in our economy. His conclusions will be of great interest not only to lawyers trying to solve current legal problems but also to policy makers concerned with providing the correct incentives for
innovation."
--Harry First,
New York University School of Law
"Innovation drives our industry, attracts the best talent, and wins fame and fortune for its leaders. Patents, copyrights, and trademarks were created to protect intellectual property and encourage innovation. In this book Professor Michael Carrier elegantly connects innovation to these legal concepts and introduces creative suggestions for improvements. The very laws that were created to protect and foster innovation are in many cases having the opposite
effect. Carrier explains why and how to better promote innovation in the 21st century."
--Don Dodge,
Microsoft Corporation
"[Innovation for the 21st Century] is impressive and worth including in your antitrust/intellectual property/innovation policy library. The book tackles the difficult task of reconciling intellectual property law and antitrust law. Professor Carrier's achievement is a remarkable one."
--Shubha Ghosh,
University of Wisconsin Law School
"I want to join the rest of the participants in [the virtual symposium on Innovation for the 21st Century] congratulating Professor Carrier on an excellent and well-written book emerging out of a thoughtful and ambitious project. The project, and the book, are provocative, important contributions to the literature, and usefully synthesize many of the most important debates in both antitrust and intellectual property."
--Josh Wright,
George Mason University School of Law
"Provides an excellent primer on antitrust, IP, and innovation. [Carrier] synthesizes the legal and economic foundations, contours, and controversies in an accessible fashion. I applaud him for doing this because frankly, it is tough to do given that the fields are quite technical and specialized. The book really is appropriate for a general audience."
--Brett Frischmann,
Loyola University Chicago School of Law
"Michael A. Carrier doesn't look radical. The intense Rutgers Law School professor seems every bit an ex-Washington corporate lawyer, federal appeals court clerk, and Yale and Michigan Law honors graduate. But his proposals for business-competition law and policy have the potential to shake Big Pharma and telecom companies, including some of Philadelphia's major employers, right down to their patented, copyrighted, and Washington-regulated foundations."
--Joseph N. DiStefano,
Philadelphia Inquirer
"Carrier explains in very clear language with a lot of good examples what the problems are regarding patents, trademarks, and copyrights, [and] he comes up with ingenious, concrete, and concise answers. Maybe some of Carrier's lessons will be taken into account for the next amendment [to China's patent law]."
--IP Dragon
"The Pirate Bay judgment (and the discussion in Europe as far as I know) lacks perspective on peer-to-peer networks and innovation. Perhaps the Svea Court of Appeal (Sweden) will reverse this decision, if the judges read professor Michael A. Carrier's excellent new book Innovation For the 21st Century."
-- Mats Bjorkenfeldt,
IPKat
"This is an impressive work. Its synthesis of three complex legal regimes -- patent, copyright, and antitrust -- with a clear focus on their instrumental role in facilitating or frustrating innovation is a major accomplishment...the book correctly and forcefully frames the legal and policy issues...Professor Carrier has produced a timely and important book."
--Peter Carstensen, University of Wisconsin Law School
The Antitrust Bulletin: Vol. 56, No. 1/Spring 2011
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Selling point: Provides an analysis of why innovation is in peril in the U.S. and offers 10 concrete solutions to aid in legal IP and antitrust matters
Selling point: Compares the current state of Intellectual Property law to Antitrust Law and shows how these seemingly unrelated areas of the law are profoundly linked to important public policy questions
Selling point: Opens a window on cutting-edge technologies and their complex interaction with business, the law, and public policy
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Michael A. Carrier is a Professor of Law at Rutgers University School of Law - Camden. He has published and spoken widely on the antitrust and intellectual property laws, and is one of the leading authorities in the country on the intersection of these laws. Professor Carrier's work has appeared in the Stanford Law Review, University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Duke Law Journal, Vanderbilt Law Review, and
Minnesota Law Review, and he is the editor of the forthcoming volume, Critical Concepts in Intellectual Property Law: Competition . Before entering academia, he clerked for the Honorable John D. Butzner, Jr. on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit,
and practiced antitrust, intellectual property, and sports law at Covington & Burling, in Washington, D.C. Professor Carrier is a summa cum laude graduate of Yale University and a cum laude graduate of Michigan Law School, where he was Book Review Editor of the Michigan Law Review .
Les mer
Selling point: Provides an analysis of why innovation is in peril in the U.S. and offers 10 concrete solutions to aid in legal IP and antitrust matters
Selling point: Compares the current state of Intellectual Property law to Antitrust Law and shows how these seemingly unrelated areas of the law are profoundly linked to important public policy questions
Selling point: Opens a window on cutting-edge technologies and their complex interaction with business, the law, and public policy
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199794287
Publisert
2011
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
590 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
22 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
416
Forfatter