Previous Development Studies
Project to conduct studies on IP and socio-economic development (2010 - 2018)
The studies emerging from this project contribute to a better understanding of the effects of IP protection on social and economic performance in developing countries. They fall within three broad themes: domestic innovation, the international and national diffusion of knowledge, and institutional features of the IP system and their economic implications.
The project is divided into two phases:
Phase two (2013 – 2018)
Phase two of the project consists of seven regional and national studies. All seven studies have been finalized:
Study on Understanding the Use of Industrial Design in Southeast Asian Countries – the Case of Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand
Study on IP in the Health Sector Innovation System in Poland
Study on the Use of IP in Chile
Study on the Use of IP in Uganda
Study on the Use of the IP System in Central America and the Dominican Republic
- Summary
- Full report (in Spanish)
Study on the Use of IP in Colombia
- Summary
- Full report (in Spanish)
Phase one (2010 – 2013)
Phase one of the project lasted from 2010-2013 and consisted of six national studies.
Reports
First progress report | Second progress report | Final report
Background documents
Study on the Use of IP in Brazil
Study on the Use of IP in Chile
- Country study
- Working paper: The use of IP in Chile
- Trademark Squatters: Evidence from Chile
- Working paper: Opportunities and Challenges for Innovation in Education
- Study on Pharmaceutical Patents in Chile
Study on the Egyptian Information Technology Sector and the Role of IP
- Exploratory study
- Working paper: Economic Assessment and Recommendations
Study on Patent’s Role in Business Strategies: Research on Chinese Companies’ Patenting Motives, Patent Implementation and Patent Industrialization
- Summary
- International Patenting Strategies of Chinese Residents
- Working paper: Analysis of Foreign-Oriented Patent Families
Study on the Use of Utility Models in Thailand
Study on the Role of IP in Uruguay
Comparing knowledge transfer policies and practices (2015-present)
This study was based on a research project at the international level. The aim was to compare knowledge transfer policies and practices in order to help evaluate and support effective knowledge transfer policies.
The countries involved are: China, Brazil South Africa, Germany, the UK and the Republic of Korea. In the future, the survey and evaluation framework may be deployed in other countries.
Related papers and meetings
- Leveraging Public Research for Innovation and Growth: United Kingdom Country Study
- China’s Policies on Technology Transfer and Transformation of Scientific and Technological Achievements
- Overview of project and main study elements: An international Comparison of Knowledge Transfer (KT) Policies and Practices
- Estimating the Global Patenting in Public Research Organizations
- Measuring the performance of Knowledge Transfer from Universities to Industry in China
- Leveraging Public Research for Innovation and Growth: China
- International workshop (Beijing, China – July 19, 2016)
IP and the informal economy (2014)
This study tackles the question of how innovation takes place in the informal sector of developing economies. In addition, it also investigates the case of three specific sectors in three African countries to provide country-level empirical evidence.
An international workshop was convened with field experts to help guide the development of the study.
- Discussion paper
- Project proposal
- Project implementation proposal
- Evaluation report
Studies
- The informal economy, innovation and intellectual property - Concepts, metrics and policy considerations – CDIP document | working paper
- Traditional herbal medicine in Ghana
- Informal metalworking sector in Kenya
- Informal manufacturers of home and personal care products in South Africa
Related meetings and publications
- International workshop (Pretoria, South Africa - November 19 to 21, 2012)
- WIPO seminar - "IP and the Informal Economy" (Geneva - May 20, 2014)
The Informal Economy in Developing Nations
This book looks at issues such as the role of the informal sector in economic development.
IP and brain drain (2013)
This study can help you to better understand the relationship between the international mobility of skilled workers and IP policies. It investigates why skilled workers migrate from one country to another and what role IP policies play in this movement.
The project behind the study consisted of an exercise to map the migration of skilled labor through available patent information, and an international workshop on the issue of IP and brain drain.
Study
CDIP document | Inventor migration files
Related papers and meetings
Related papers
- Inventor data for research on migration and innovation: a survey and a pilot
- International workshop (Geneva, Switzerland – April 29 and 30, 2013)