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WIPO/PUB/ECONSTAT/WP/100

Common Knowledge? Gender Differences in IP Rights Awareness

Economic Research Working Paper No.100

This paper examines gender disparities in intellectual property (IP) awareness and participation, using the 2023 and 2025 waves of the WIPO Pulse Survey conducted among 58,135 individuals across seventy-four countries. Our findings reveal that copyrights are the most recognized IP forms globally, while patents, trademarks and geographical indications remain the least familiar. At the individual level, women demonstrate lower knowledge of patents and trademarks, but greater knowledge of designs and copyrights compared to men, with these differences persisting after controlling for socioeconomic factors. These patterns are consistent with gendered specialization in education, professional and household spheres where women tend to cluster in creative industries while men dominate entrepreneurship and technical sectors. Notably, we observe a cohort effect: while we identify significant differences in knowledge between men and women for older cohorts, these disappear among younger cohorts. We do not observe comparable changes by level of education or occupation of respondents. Moreover, women exhibit more positive attitudes towards IP-protected products across categories. These findings highlight the need for targeted awareness campaigns and reveal that gendered patterns of IP knowledge may contribute to innovation gender gaps through educational pathways and professional specialization.

Publication year: 2026

WIPO/PUB/2020/26

Development and Pitching of Audiovisual Projects: A guide for independent filmmakers

Development and Pitching of Audiovisual Projects: A guide for independent filmmakers looks at the most important elements to take into consideration when developing and pitching audiovisual projects to secure financing and distribution. It outlines the journey from initial idea to structured project, emphasizing three key elements: artistic, financial, and legal considerations.

Publication year: 2026

WIPO/PUB/2018/26

Rights Clearance: A guide for independent filmmakers

Rights Clearance: A guide for independent filmmakers will help filmmakers to understand and incorporate rights clearance in their concepts, development planning and productions with special attention to IP rights. With practical steps, the process of rights clearance can start as early as possible to avoid pitfalls and complex licensing issues during the later stages of the production.

Publication year: 2026

WIPO/PUB/891/1

Guide to the Copyright and Related Rights Treaties Administered by WIPO

Second edition

This new edition of the Guide to the Copyright and Related Rights Treaties Administered by WIPO is the most authoritative publication on WIPO's copyright treaties. The publication presents an updated legal commentary on all eight WIPO copyright and related rights treaties, adding the two newest (Beijing Treaty and Marrakesh Treaty). It includes background information as well as article by article explanation on, and interpretation of, each instrument, particularly in relation to new technological developments. The publication provides key information and guidelines to a large audience, for example, policy makers, government officials, legal practitioners, judges, scholars, academics and students.

Publication year: 2026

WIPO/PUB/ECONSTAT/WP/99

Measuring IP Finance and Investment in the Music Industry

Economic Research Working Paper No.99

This quantitative study examines how music IP rights are transforming into a global financial asset class, which is having an impact on artists and music ecosystems worldwide. New investors and digital platforms are changing the way creative works and rights are valued and monetised across diverse cultural contexts. By providing empirical evidence of these dynamics and identifying key stakeholders via the data, the study can help inform policymakers and potential changes to IP and other legal frameworks. The research draws on new data sources and original analyses of the latest trends in news media coverage and investment in music rights technology, as well as daily return data from rights trading platforms and information from official IP data sources.

Publication year: 2026

WIPO/PUB/ECONSTAT/WP/98

IP Finance in the Music Industry

Economic Research Working Paper No.98

This qualitative study looks at the transformation of music IP rights into a global financial asset class, which affects artists and music ecosystems worldwide, from K-pop markets in South Korea to legacy rock catalogues in the United States, regardless of genre. New investors and digital platforms have emerged and reshape how creative works and rights are valued and monetized across diverse cultural contexts. It seems crucial for policymakers to understand market opportunities and potential risk as well as identify key stakeholders in order to ensure that IP frameworks provide a sustainable economic foundation for the next generation of creative talent. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with industry experts and artists, case studies, and extensive desk research, this study explores the policy implications and economics of music rights trading and investment.

Publication year: 2026

WIPO/PUB/ECONSTAT/WP/96

Digital transformations in developing economies: From the first-mile infrastructure to the end-user finger tips

Economic Research Working Paper No.96

This paper reviews the concepts, mechanisms, and empirical evidence on the diffusion of digital technologies (DTs) in developing economies, focusing on the distinct infrastructural layers of connectivity—from first-mile submarine cables to last-mile mobile and broadband networks. It examines how infrastructure gaps, usage disparities, and technological divides shape digitalization pathways and their socio-economic impacts, with a particular emphasis on lower-income regions like Sub-Saharan Africa. The analysis highlights how submarine cables reduce connectivity costs and expand Internet access, yet also reveals uneven benefits due to limited absorptive capacity and new digital vulnerabilities. By synthesizing evidence on rural mobile coverage, urban Internet spillovers, and trade integration, the paper emphasizes the need for coordinated policies to bridge digital divides and foster inclusive digital transformation.

Publication year: 2026

WIPO/PUB/ECONSTAT/WP/95

Diffusion of Clean Technologies: Patterns, Mechanisms, and Future Challenges

Economic Research Working Paper No.95

This paper examines the patterns and mechanisms of global clean technology diffusion over the last two decades. We document four stylized facts: uneven sectoral progress favoring power and light transport; China's dominance in innovation and manufacturing; the role of modularity in driving cost declines; and limited adoption in developing economies. Through case studies of solar, electric vehicles, and hydrogen, we analyze how policy and infrastructure enable scale. Finally, we assess emerging challenges for the next phase of diffusion, including critical mineral constraints, artificial intelligence, and geopolitical fragmentation.

Publication year: 2026

WIPO/PUB/ECONSTAT/WP/94

Understanding Technology Diffusion in the Agricultural Sector

Economic Research Working Paper No.94

The paper introduces the basic concepts related to adoption, diffusion and innovation in the agricultural sector. This paper introduces relevant definitions and issues, examines conceptual models of technology diffusion in agriculture, followed by a description of the process of technology discovery. The paper furthermore explores the channels and mechanisms of diffusion, the factors influencing adoption, the adaptation of technologies to local contexts, empirical studies illustrating innovation and diffusion patterns, the role of government policies and international organizations, and the impact of technology diffusion on agricultural productivity, sustainable development, and food security and livelihoods. The paper then discusses innovation and diffusion of agricultural biotechnologies and precision agricultural technologies by summarizing the experiences and lessons learned from insect resistant and herbicide tolerant maize, insect resistant cotton and precision agriculture technologies in a selected set of countries. The paper draws up policy lessons and recommendations that may be useful to policy and decision makers considering such technologies in their jurisdiction.

Publication year: 2026

WIPO/PUB/ECONSTAT/WP/93

Diffusion of Genetically Modified Crop Technology

Economic Research Working Paper No.93

Technology diffusion is central to the process of innovation, as new products or processes must be adopted for them to make meaningful contributions to societal welfare or economic growth. We focus here on the global diffusion of technology that has the potential to improve food insecurity and address challenges posed by climatic effects, genetically modified (GM) crops. We adopt a variety of sources and methods to demonstrate the reach and timing of genetically modified crop technology diffusion worldwide, relying primarily on national regulatory approval information. Specifically, we depict the international adoption of genetically modified crop technology over time and assess the rate at which GM cotton, maize, and soybeans have been adopted within countries. In addition, we examine two case studies that assess an underused information source—trademark data—to determine whether they provide an alternative measure of diffusion. The case studies focus on two different contexts: established branded technologies and nascent technologies. In addition to significant overlap with regulatory approval data for established branded technologies, trademarks appear to provide an indicator of pre-commercialization in countries where regulatory approval coverage can expand. We end with guidance on when trademarks may serve as an indicator of international technology diffusion.

Publication year: 2026