Cambridge Handbook of Public-Private Partnerships, Intellectual Property Governance, and Sustainable Development

Cambridge Handbook of Public-Private Partnerships, Intellectual Property Governance, and Sustainable Development

Abdel-Latif, Ahmed; Roffe, Pedro; Chon, Margaret

Cambridge University Press

09/2018

462

Dura

Inglês

9781107175839

15 a 20 dias

1190

Descrição não disponível.
Introduction; 1. Charting the triple interface of public-private partnerships, global knowledge governance, and sustainable development goals Margaret Chon, Pedro Roffe and Ahmed Abdel-Latif; Part I. Public Health: 2. Public-private partnerships as models for new drug research and development: the future as now Frederick Abbott; 3. Driving innovation for global health through multi-stakeholder partnerships Anatole Krattiger, Thomas Bombelles and Ania Jedrusik; 4. Creating, managing, and advancing collaborations: the road to successful partnerships Katy M. Graef, Jennifer Dent and Amy Starr; 5. Patent pooling in public health Esteban Burrone; 6. Intellectual property in early-phase research public-private partnerships in the biomedical sector Hilde Stevens and Isabelle Huys; Part II. Education, ICT and Libraries: 7. A publisher perspective on a public-private partnership for access to biomedical information Jens Bammel; 8. A sustainable development agenda for the World Intellectual Property Organization: networked governance and public-private partnerships Sara Bannerman; 9. The Marrakesh Treaty, public-private partnerships, and access to copyrighted works by visually impaired persons Susan Isiko Strba; 10. Intellectual property and public-private partner motivations: lessons from a digital library Melissa Levine; Part III. Green Technologies and Agriculture: 11. The rise of public-private partnerships in green technologies and intellectual property rights Ahmed Abdel-Latif; 12. Innovation law and policy choices for climate change-related public-private partnerships Joshua Sarnoff and Margaret Chon; 13. How do climate change and energy-related partnerships impact innovation and technology transfer? Aysem Mert and Philipp Pattberg; 14. One size does not fit all: the role of the state and the private sector in the governing framework of geographical indications Irene Calboli and Delphine Marie-Vivienne; Part IV. Governance and Institutional Design Perspectives: 15. Public-private partnerships and technology sharing: existing models and future institutional designs Padmashree Gehl Sampath; 16. From the MDGs to the SDGs: cross-sector partnerships as avenues to development in the UN system David J. Maurrasse; 17. Sustainable development through a cross-regional research partnership Chidi Oguamanam and Jeremy De Beer; 18. Intellectual property, human rights and public-private partnerships Peter K. Yu; Conclusions; 19. The triple interface: findings and future directions Margaret Chon.