Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China : : Comparing Six Economic Sectors.

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Superior document:ARCIALA Series on Intellectual Assets and Law in Asia Series
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Place / Publishing House:Singapore : : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited,, 2019.
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Year of Publication:2019
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Series:ARCIALA Series on Intellectual Assets and Law in Asia Series
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spelling Liu, Kung-Chung.
Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China : Comparing Six Economic Sectors.
1st ed.
Singapore : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited, 2019.
©2019.
1 online resource (513 pages)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
ARCIALA Series on Intellectual Assets and Law in Asia Series
Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China -- Contents -- About the Authors -- Introduction, Summary, and Some Inferences -- 1 Background -- 2 Methodology -- 3 Summary of the Findings of the Seven Study Groups -- 3.1 IP Codification and Innovation Governance -- 3.2 IT Industry -- 3.2.1 Current Status -- 3.2.2 Major Findings -- 3.3 Film Industry -- 3.3.1 Current Status -- 3.4 Pharmaceutical Industry -- 3.4.1 Current Status -- 3.5 Plant Varieties and Food Security -- 3.5.1 Current Status -- 3.6 Automobile Industry -- 3.6.1 Current Status -- 3.7 The Culture of Sharing and the Sharing Economy -- 3.8 Current Status -- Part I: IP Codification and Innovation Governance -- On the necessity of incorporating IP Laws into the Civil Law of China and How -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Establishment of IP Rights Has Revolutionized Property -- 3 Doctrinal and Practical Value of Codifying IP Laws into the Civil Law -- 3.1 The Civil Law Principally Guides IP Laws -- 3.2 Feedback from IP Theories and Systems to the Civil Law -- 4 Choice of Models for the Fusion Between IP Laws and the Civil Law -- 5 Relationship Between IP Laws, the General Provisions of the Civil Law and Its Respective Chapters -- 6 Technical Issues for Fusing IP Laws into the Civil Law -- 7 IP Laws and the Rule of Law in China -- Constitutional Governance in India and China and Its Impact on National Innovation -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Brief Introduction to the National Innovation System -- 3 Different Political Philosophy for Social Revolution and Social Justice -- 3.1 Social Revolution: Violent Revolution vs. Democratic Governance -- 3.2 Pursuing Social Justice: Transcendental Institutionalism vs. Realization-Focused Comparison -- 4 Power Distribution: Government Accountability vs. Policy Innovation.
4.1 Vertical Power Distribution: Accountability vs. Local Innovation -- 4.2 Horizontal Power Distribution: Accountability vs. Policy Innovation -- 4.3 Constitutional Enforcement: Citizens' Rights vs. State Power -- 5 The Impact of Constitutional Governance on Economic Development Path and Innovation Strategy -- 5.1 Impact on Economic Development Path -- 5.2 Case Study on ICT of the Impact on Innovation Strategy -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Part II: IT Industry -- Information Technology Industry in China -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Economic Development Patterns and Characteristics in General -- 2.1 Development Patterns -- 2.2 Economic Development Characteristics -- 2.3 Identifying and Explaining Similarities and Differences -- 3 IT Industries: Two Kinds of Technical and Business Sectors -- 4 Comparing the Two Countries -- 4.1 Government Policies on IT Industries -- 4.1.1 China -- 4.1.2 India -- 4.2 Comparative Advantages of Chinese IT Companies -- 4.3 Comparative Advantages of Indian IT Companies -- 4.3.1 Strengths -- 4.3.2 Reasons Attributed to Stronger Competitiveness -- 4.3.3 Challenges -- 5 IP Factors in China and India -- 5.1 National-Level Patent Strategies -- 5.2 Firm-Level IP Strategies -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- India's Information Technology Industry: A Tale of Two Halves -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Computer Electronics Industry in India -- 2.1 Triggering the Development of the Industry -- 2.2 Facilitating the Growth of the Electronics Industry in the 1980s -- 2.3 Technology Imports and Domestic R&amp -- D Behaviour -- 2.3.1 Domestic R&amp -- D Behaviour: C-DAC and Param Supercomputer -- 2.4 Electronics Industry in the Period of Economic Reforms -- 2.5 Manufacturing -- 2.6 Strategic Role of Standards -- 3 India's Information Technology-Enabled Services -- 3.1 Evolution of the ITES Industry in India.
3.2 The Beginnings of a Global ITES Hub -- 3.3 Consolidation of the Industry Since the Mid-1980s -- 3.4 Software Technology Parks and IT Clusters -- 3.5 India as an ITES Leader in the New Millennium -- 3.6 Current Status -- 3.7 R&amp -- D, Innovation and Intellectual Property Rights -- 4 Patentability of Computer-Related Inventions in India -- 4.1 Yardsticks Followed by the CG Office to Deal with  Section 3(k) -- 4.1.1 The 2013 Guidelines -- 4.1.2 The 2015 Guidelines -- 4.1.3 The 2017 Guidelines -- 4.2 Court Decisions on Patenting of Computer Programmes -- 5 By Way of Conclusions -- References -- Part III: Film Industry -- Chinese Film Industry Under the Lens of Copyright, Policy, and Market -- 1 Early Cinema (1896-1930) -- 2 Wartime Cinema (1930-1949) -- 3 Socialist Cinema (1949-1978) -- 3.1 State-Owned and Policy-Controlled Cinema -- 3.2 Film Copyright Remained Unattended -- 4 Contemporary Cinema (1979-Present) -- 4.1 Recovery Period of Internal Reform -- 4.2 Cinema Marketization -- 4.2.1 The 1990 Copyright Law Set Up Basic Copyright Framework for the Film Industry -- 4.2.2 Further Reform in Film Distribution, Import, and Production -- 4.2.3 A Comprehensive Prior Approval System for Films -- 4.3 Industrialization -- 4.3.1 Further Liberalization of Import and Distribution of Foreign Films -- 4.3.2 Nationwide Cinema Chains -- 4.3.3 Further Liberalization of Film Production -- 4.3.4 Internet Giants Are Swarming into the Film Industry -- 4.3.5 Film Copyright -- 5 Challenges Ahead -- References -- Reminiscing About the Golden Age: An Analysis of Efforts to Revive the Hong Kong Film Industry Through the Lens of Copyright Protection -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Hong Kong Film Industry: Growth and Decline -- 2.1 Factors Within the Core Model of the Hong Kong Film Industry -- 2.2 External Factors.
3 The Road to Revival of the Hong Kong Film Industry -- 3.1 Hong Kong Film Development Council -- 3.2 Hong Kong International Film and TV Market and Hong Kong International Film Festival -- 3.3 Film Development Fund -- 3.4 Create Hong Kong (CreateHK) and Hong Kong Arts Development Council -- 3.5 Closer Economic Partnership Agreement -- 4 The Implications of the Hong Kong Copyright Framework on the Film Revival -- 4.1 Co-authorship of Films -- 4.2 Unclear Scope of "Copy" and Insufficient Protection for Secondary Creation -- 4.3 Criminal Liability for Copyright Infringement -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Codes and Statutes -- Jurisprudence -- Books -- Journal Articles -- Official Reports -- Newspapers &amp -- Websites -- Contemporary Challenges of Online Copyright Enforcement in India -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Piracy Landscape in India -- 3 Targeting End-Users: A Graduated Response Proposal -- 4 Website-Blocking Injunctions -- 5 Ad-Supported Piracy -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Continued Economic Benefit to the Author: Royalties in the Indian Film Industry - Historical Development, Current Status, and Practical Application -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Music Deals: Indian Context -- 3 Historical Perspective -- 3.1 Judicial Backdrop to the Amendments -- 3.2 The Problems with Copyright Societies in India -- 4 The New Royalties Regime -- 5 The Aftermath of the Amendments -- 6 Conclusion: The Way Forward -- References -- Part IV: Pharmaceutical Industry -- Pharmaceutical Industry in China: Policy, Market and IP -- 1 Approaches and Framework -- 2 Overview of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 2.1 The Historical Development -- 2.2 Current Status -- 2.2.1 Expansion of Total Industrial Scale -- 2.2.2 Improvement in Industrial Capacity -- 2.2.3 High Degree of Market Opening Up, Strong Market Shares by Foreign-Funded Enterprises.
2.2.4 Administration of Pharmaceutical Industries in China -- 2.3 Problems in the Development of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 2.3.1 Low R&amp -- D Investment in Pharmaceutical Companies -- 2.3.2 Vehicle for New Drugs R&amp -- D Is Research Institutions, Not Enterprises -- 2.3.3 Lack of Advanced Technology and IP Rights by Chinese Pharmaceutical Companies -- 2.3.4 Small-Scale Pharma Companies, Low Market Concentration and Substantial Percentage of Enterprises in Deficit -- 2.3.5 Increasing but Low Export of Traditional Chinese Medicine -- 3 Policy Structure of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 3.1 The Access to Drug Market and Approval of Drugs -- 3.1.1 Approval of New Drugs -- 3.1.2 The Generic Drug Application Procedure and Its Incentive System -- 3.2 Drug Pricing Policies -- 3.3 Regulatory Policies on Industrial Structure and Layout -- 4 The Market Structure of China's Pharmaceutical Industries -- 4.1 The High Expenditure Rate Under China's Medicare System -- 4.2 The Dominant Mode of Monopoly by Hospitals -- 4.2.1 The "Hospital and Pharmacy Together" Model Facilitates Drug Sales by Hospitals -- 4.2.2 The "Hospitals Supported by Medicines" Phenomenon Provides Hospitals with Monopoly Power -- 4.2.3 Drug Management Policies Conducive to Monopoly -- 4.2.4 The Supply and Demand Characteristics of the Medical Industry Conducive to Monopoly -- 4.3 China's Generic Drug Market -- 4.3.1 Generic Drugs Occupy the Drug Markets -- 4.3.2 The Opportunities upon Patent Expiration -- 5 IP Structure in Pharmaceutical Industries in China -- 5.1 The Patented Drug Market -- 5.1.1 The Demand for Drugs Against Infectious Diseases Relies on Patented Drugs -- 5.1.2 Patented Drugs Are More Profitable Than Generic Drugs -- 5.1.3 National Drug Price Negotiations Increased the Sales of Patented Drugs.
5.1.4 The Patent Linkage System Is Imperfect.
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Racherla, Uday S.
Print version: Liu, Kung-Chung Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China Singapore : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited,c2019 9789811381010
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author Liu, Kung-Chung.
spellingShingle Liu, Kung-Chung.
Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China : Comparing Six Economic Sectors.
ARCIALA Series on Intellectual Assets and Law in Asia Series
Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China -- Contents -- About the Authors -- Introduction, Summary, and Some Inferences -- 1 Background -- 2 Methodology -- 3 Summary of the Findings of the Seven Study Groups -- 3.1 IP Codification and Innovation Governance -- 3.2 IT Industry -- 3.2.1 Current Status -- 3.2.2 Major Findings -- 3.3 Film Industry -- 3.3.1 Current Status -- 3.4 Pharmaceutical Industry -- 3.4.1 Current Status -- 3.5 Plant Varieties and Food Security -- 3.5.1 Current Status -- 3.6 Automobile Industry -- 3.6.1 Current Status -- 3.7 The Culture of Sharing and the Sharing Economy -- 3.8 Current Status -- Part I: IP Codification and Innovation Governance -- On the necessity of incorporating IP Laws into the Civil Law of China and How -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Establishment of IP Rights Has Revolutionized Property -- 3 Doctrinal and Practical Value of Codifying IP Laws into the Civil Law -- 3.1 The Civil Law Principally Guides IP Laws -- 3.2 Feedback from IP Theories and Systems to the Civil Law -- 4 Choice of Models for the Fusion Between IP Laws and the Civil Law -- 5 Relationship Between IP Laws, the General Provisions of the Civil Law and Its Respective Chapters -- 6 Technical Issues for Fusing IP Laws into the Civil Law -- 7 IP Laws and the Rule of Law in China -- Constitutional Governance in India and China and Its Impact on National Innovation -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Brief Introduction to the National Innovation System -- 3 Different Political Philosophy for Social Revolution and Social Justice -- 3.1 Social Revolution: Violent Revolution vs. Democratic Governance -- 3.2 Pursuing Social Justice: Transcendental Institutionalism vs. Realization-Focused Comparison -- 4 Power Distribution: Government Accountability vs. Policy Innovation.
4.1 Vertical Power Distribution: Accountability vs. Local Innovation -- 4.2 Horizontal Power Distribution: Accountability vs. Policy Innovation -- 4.3 Constitutional Enforcement: Citizens' Rights vs. State Power -- 5 The Impact of Constitutional Governance on Economic Development Path and Innovation Strategy -- 5.1 Impact on Economic Development Path -- 5.2 Case Study on ICT of the Impact on Innovation Strategy -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Part II: IT Industry -- Information Technology Industry in China -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Economic Development Patterns and Characteristics in General -- 2.1 Development Patterns -- 2.2 Economic Development Characteristics -- 2.3 Identifying and Explaining Similarities and Differences -- 3 IT Industries: Two Kinds of Technical and Business Sectors -- 4 Comparing the Two Countries -- 4.1 Government Policies on IT Industries -- 4.1.1 China -- 4.1.2 India -- 4.2 Comparative Advantages of Chinese IT Companies -- 4.3 Comparative Advantages of Indian IT Companies -- 4.3.1 Strengths -- 4.3.2 Reasons Attributed to Stronger Competitiveness -- 4.3.3 Challenges -- 5 IP Factors in China and India -- 5.1 National-Level Patent Strategies -- 5.2 Firm-Level IP Strategies -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- India's Information Technology Industry: A Tale of Two Halves -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Computer Electronics Industry in India -- 2.1 Triggering the Development of the Industry -- 2.2 Facilitating the Growth of the Electronics Industry in the 1980s -- 2.3 Technology Imports and Domestic R&amp -- D Behaviour -- 2.3.1 Domestic R&amp -- D Behaviour: C-DAC and Param Supercomputer -- 2.4 Electronics Industry in the Period of Economic Reforms -- 2.5 Manufacturing -- 2.6 Strategic Role of Standards -- 3 India's Information Technology-Enabled Services -- 3.1 Evolution of the ITES Industry in India.
3.2 The Beginnings of a Global ITES Hub -- 3.3 Consolidation of the Industry Since the Mid-1980s -- 3.4 Software Technology Parks and IT Clusters -- 3.5 India as an ITES Leader in the New Millennium -- 3.6 Current Status -- 3.7 R&amp -- D, Innovation and Intellectual Property Rights -- 4 Patentability of Computer-Related Inventions in India -- 4.1 Yardsticks Followed by the CG Office to Deal with  Section 3(k) -- 4.1.1 The 2013 Guidelines -- 4.1.2 The 2015 Guidelines -- 4.1.3 The 2017 Guidelines -- 4.2 Court Decisions on Patenting of Computer Programmes -- 5 By Way of Conclusions -- References -- Part III: Film Industry -- Chinese Film Industry Under the Lens of Copyright, Policy, and Market -- 1 Early Cinema (1896-1930) -- 2 Wartime Cinema (1930-1949) -- 3 Socialist Cinema (1949-1978) -- 3.1 State-Owned and Policy-Controlled Cinema -- 3.2 Film Copyright Remained Unattended -- 4 Contemporary Cinema (1979-Present) -- 4.1 Recovery Period of Internal Reform -- 4.2 Cinema Marketization -- 4.2.1 The 1990 Copyright Law Set Up Basic Copyright Framework for the Film Industry -- 4.2.2 Further Reform in Film Distribution, Import, and Production -- 4.2.3 A Comprehensive Prior Approval System for Films -- 4.3 Industrialization -- 4.3.1 Further Liberalization of Import and Distribution of Foreign Films -- 4.3.2 Nationwide Cinema Chains -- 4.3.3 Further Liberalization of Film Production -- 4.3.4 Internet Giants Are Swarming into the Film Industry -- 4.3.5 Film Copyright -- 5 Challenges Ahead -- References -- Reminiscing About the Golden Age: An Analysis of Efforts to Revive the Hong Kong Film Industry Through the Lens of Copyright Protection -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Hong Kong Film Industry: Growth and Decline -- 2.1 Factors Within the Core Model of the Hong Kong Film Industry -- 2.2 External Factors.
3 The Road to Revival of the Hong Kong Film Industry -- 3.1 Hong Kong Film Development Council -- 3.2 Hong Kong International Film and TV Market and Hong Kong International Film Festival -- 3.3 Film Development Fund -- 3.4 Create Hong Kong (CreateHK) and Hong Kong Arts Development Council -- 3.5 Closer Economic Partnership Agreement -- 4 The Implications of the Hong Kong Copyright Framework on the Film Revival -- 4.1 Co-authorship of Films -- 4.2 Unclear Scope of "Copy" and Insufficient Protection for Secondary Creation -- 4.3 Criminal Liability for Copyright Infringement -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Codes and Statutes -- Jurisprudence -- Books -- Journal Articles -- Official Reports -- Newspapers &amp -- Websites -- Contemporary Challenges of Online Copyright Enforcement in India -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Piracy Landscape in India -- 3 Targeting End-Users: A Graduated Response Proposal -- 4 Website-Blocking Injunctions -- 5 Ad-Supported Piracy -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Continued Economic Benefit to the Author: Royalties in the Indian Film Industry - Historical Development, Current Status, and Practical Application -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Music Deals: Indian Context -- 3 Historical Perspective -- 3.1 Judicial Backdrop to the Amendments -- 3.2 The Problems with Copyright Societies in India -- 4 The New Royalties Regime -- 5 The Aftermath of the Amendments -- 6 Conclusion: The Way Forward -- References -- Part IV: Pharmaceutical Industry -- Pharmaceutical Industry in China: Policy, Market and IP -- 1 Approaches and Framework -- 2 Overview of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 2.1 The Historical Development -- 2.2 Current Status -- 2.2.1 Expansion of Total Industrial Scale -- 2.2.2 Improvement in Industrial Capacity -- 2.2.3 High Degree of Market Opening Up, Strong Market Shares by Foreign-Funded Enterprises.
2.2.4 Administration of Pharmaceutical Industries in China -- 2.3 Problems in the Development of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 2.3.1 Low R&amp -- D Investment in Pharmaceutical Companies -- 2.3.2 Vehicle for New Drugs R&amp -- D Is Research Institutions, Not Enterprises -- 2.3.3 Lack of Advanced Technology and IP Rights by Chinese Pharmaceutical Companies -- 2.3.4 Small-Scale Pharma Companies, Low Market Concentration and Substantial Percentage of Enterprises in Deficit -- 2.3.5 Increasing but Low Export of Traditional Chinese Medicine -- 3 Policy Structure of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 3.1 The Access to Drug Market and Approval of Drugs -- 3.1.1 Approval of New Drugs -- 3.1.2 The Generic Drug Application Procedure and Its Incentive System -- 3.2 Drug Pricing Policies -- 3.3 Regulatory Policies on Industrial Structure and Layout -- 4 The Market Structure of China's Pharmaceutical Industries -- 4.1 The High Expenditure Rate Under China's Medicare System -- 4.2 The Dominant Mode of Monopoly by Hospitals -- 4.2.1 The "Hospital and Pharmacy Together" Model Facilitates Drug Sales by Hospitals -- 4.2.2 The "Hospitals Supported by Medicines" Phenomenon Provides Hospitals with Monopoly Power -- 4.2.3 Drug Management Policies Conducive to Monopoly -- 4.2.4 The Supply and Demand Characteristics of the Medical Industry Conducive to Monopoly -- 4.3 China's Generic Drug Market -- 4.3.1 Generic Drugs Occupy the Drug Markets -- 4.3.2 The Opportunities upon Patent Expiration -- 5 IP Structure in Pharmaceutical Industries in China -- 5.1 The Patented Drug Market -- 5.1.1 The Demand for Drugs Against Infectious Diseases Relies on Patented Drugs -- 5.1.2 Patented Drugs Are More Profitable Than Generic Drugs -- 5.1.3 National Drug Price Negotiations Increased the Sales of Patented Drugs.
5.1.4 The Patent Linkage System Is Imperfect.
author_facet Liu, Kung-Chung.
Racherla, Uday S.
author_variant k c l kcl
author2 Racherla, Uday S.
author2_variant u s r us usr
author2_role TeilnehmendeR
author_sort Liu, Kung-Chung.
title Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China : Comparing Six Economic Sectors.
title_sub Comparing Six Economic Sectors.
title_full Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China : Comparing Six Economic Sectors.
title_fullStr Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China : Comparing Six Economic Sectors.
title_full_unstemmed Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China : Comparing Six Economic Sectors.
title_auth Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China : Comparing Six Economic Sectors.
title_new Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China :
title_sort innovation, economic development, and intellectual property in india and china : comparing six economic sectors.
series ARCIALA Series on Intellectual Assets and Law in Asia Series
series2 ARCIALA Series on Intellectual Assets and Law in Asia Series
publisher Springer Singapore Pte. Limited,
publishDate 2019
physical 1 online resource (513 pages)
edition 1st ed.
contents Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China -- Contents -- About the Authors -- Introduction, Summary, and Some Inferences -- 1 Background -- 2 Methodology -- 3 Summary of the Findings of the Seven Study Groups -- 3.1 IP Codification and Innovation Governance -- 3.2 IT Industry -- 3.2.1 Current Status -- 3.2.2 Major Findings -- 3.3 Film Industry -- 3.3.1 Current Status -- 3.4 Pharmaceutical Industry -- 3.4.1 Current Status -- 3.5 Plant Varieties and Food Security -- 3.5.1 Current Status -- 3.6 Automobile Industry -- 3.6.1 Current Status -- 3.7 The Culture of Sharing and the Sharing Economy -- 3.8 Current Status -- Part I: IP Codification and Innovation Governance -- On the necessity of incorporating IP Laws into the Civil Law of China and How -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Establishment of IP Rights Has Revolutionized Property -- 3 Doctrinal and Practical Value of Codifying IP Laws into the Civil Law -- 3.1 The Civil Law Principally Guides IP Laws -- 3.2 Feedback from IP Theories and Systems to the Civil Law -- 4 Choice of Models for the Fusion Between IP Laws and the Civil Law -- 5 Relationship Between IP Laws, the General Provisions of the Civil Law and Its Respective Chapters -- 6 Technical Issues for Fusing IP Laws into the Civil Law -- 7 IP Laws and the Rule of Law in China -- Constitutional Governance in India and China and Its Impact on National Innovation -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Brief Introduction to the National Innovation System -- 3 Different Political Philosophy for Social Revolution and Social Justice -- 3.1 Social Revolution: Violent Revolution vs. Democratic Governance -- 3.2 Pursuing Social Justice: Transcendental Institutionalism vs. Realization-Focused Comparison -- 4 Power Distribution: Government Accountability vs. Policy Innovation.
4.1 Vertical Power Distribution: Accountability vs. Local Innovation -- 4.2 Horizontal Power Distribution: Accountability vs. Policy Innovation -- 4.3 Constitutional Enforcement: Citizens' Rights vs. State Power -- 5 The Impact of Constitutional Governance on Economic Development Path and Innovation Strategy -- 5.1 Impact on Economic Development Path -- 5.2 Case Study on ICT of the Impact on Innovation Strategy -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Part II: IT Industry -- Information Technology Industry in China -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Economic Development Patterns and Characteristics in General -- 2.1 Development Patterns -- 2.2 Economic Development Characteristics -- 2.3 Identifying and Explaining Similarities and Differences -- 3 IT Industries: Two Kinds of Technical and Business Sectors -- 4 Comparing the Two Countries -- 4.1 Government Policies on IT Industries -- 4.1.1 China -- 4.1.2 India -- 4.2 Comparative Advantages of Chinese IT Companies -- 4.3 Comparative Advantages of Indian IT Companies -- 4.3.1 Strengths -- 4.3.2 Reasons Attributed to Stronger Competitiveness -- 4.3.3 Challenges -- 5 IP Factors in China and India -- 5.1 National-Level Patent Strategies -- 5.2 Firm-Level IP Strategies -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- India's Information Technology Industry: A Tale of Two Halves -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Computer Electronics Industry in India -- 2.1 Triggering the Development of the Industry -- 2.2 Facilitating the Growth of the Electronics Industry in the 1980s -- 2.3 Technology Imports and Domestic R&amp -- D Behaviour -- 2.3.1 Domestic R&amp -- D Behaviour: C-DAC and Param Supercomputer -- 2.4 Electronics Industry in the Period of Economic Reforms -- 2.5 Manufacturing -- 2.6 Strategic Role of Standards -- 3 India's Information Technology-Enabled Services -- 3.1 Evolution of the ITES Industry in India.
3.2 The Beginnings of a Global ITES Hub -- 3.3 Consolidation of the Industry Since the Mid-1980s -- 3.4 Software Technology Parks and IT Clusters -- 3.5 India as an ITES Leader in the New Millennium -- 3.6 Current Status -- 3.7 R&amp -- D, Innovation and Intellectual Property Rights -- 4 Patentability of Computer-Related Inventions in India -- 4.1 Yardsticks Followed by the CG Office to Deal with  Section 3(k) -- 4.1.1 The 2013 Guidelines -- 4.1.2 The 2015 Guidelines -- 4.1.3 The 2017 Guidelines -- 4.2 Court Decisions on Patenting of Computer Programmes -- 5 By Way of Conclusions -- References -- Part III: Film Industry -- Chinese Film Industry Under the Lens of Copyright, Policy, and Market -- 1 Early Cinema (1896-1930) -- 2 Wartime Cinema (1930-1949) -- 3 Socialist Cinema (1949-1978) -- 3.1 State-Owned and Policy-Controlled Cinema -- 3.2 Film Copyright Remained Unattended -- 4 Contemporary Cinema (1979-Present) -- 4.1 Recovery Period of Internal Reform -- 4.2 Cinema Marketization -- 4.2.1 The 1990 Copyright Law Set Up Basic Copyright Framework for the Film Industry -- 4.2.2 Further Reform in Film Distribution, Import, and Production -- 4.2.3 A Comprehensive Prior Approval System for Films -- 4.3 Industrialization -- 4.3.1 Further Liberalization of Import and Distribution of Foreign Films -- 4.3.2 Nationwide Cinema Chains -- 4.3.3 Further Liberalization of Film Production -- 4.3.4 Internet Giants Are Swarming into the Film Industry -- 4.3.5 Film Copyright -- 5 Challenges Ahead -- References -- Reminiscing About the Golden Age: An Analysis of Efforts to Revive the Hong Kong Film Industry Through the Lens of Copyright Protection -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Hong Kong Film Industry: Growth and Decline -- 2.1 Factors Within the Core Model of the Hong Kong Film Industry -- 2.2 External Factors.
3 The Road to Revival of the Hong Kong Film Industry -- 3.1 Hong Kong Film Development Council -- 3.2 Hong Kong International Film and TV Market and Hong Kong International Film Festival -- 3.3 Film Development Fund -- 3.4 Create Hong Kong (CreateHK) and Hong Kong Arts Development Council -- 3.5 Closer Economic Partnership Agreement -- 4 The Implications of the Hong Kong Copyright Framework on the Film Revival -- 4.1 Co-authorship of Films -- 4.2 Unclear Scope of "Copy" and Insufficient Protection for Secondary Creation -- 4.3 Criminal Liability for Copyright Infringement -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Codes and Statutes -- Jurisprudence -- Books -- Journal Articles -- Official Reports -- Newspapers &amp -- Websites -- Contemporary Challenges of Online Copyright Enforcement in India -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Piracy Landscape in India -- 3 Targeting End-Users: A Graduated Response Proposal -- 4 Website-Blocking Injunctions -- 5 Ad-Supported Piracy -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Continued Economic Benefit to the Author: Royalties in the Indian Film Industry - Historical Development, Current Status, and Practical Application -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Music Deals: Indian Context -- 3 Historical Perspective -- 3.1 Judicial Backdrop to the Amendments -- 3.2 The Problems with Copyright Societies in India -- 4 The New Royalties Regime -- 5 The Aftermath of the Amendments -- 6 Conclusion: The Way Forward -- References -- Part IV: Pharmaceutical Industry -- Pharmaceutical Industry in China: Policy, Market and IP -- 1 Approaches and Framework -- 2 Overview of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 2.1 The Historical Development -- 2.2 Current Status -- 2.2.1 Expansion of Total Industrial Scale -- 2.2.2 Improvement in Industrial Capacity -- 2.2.3 High Degree of Market Opening Up, Strong Market Shares by Foreign-Funded Enterprises.
2.2.4 Administration of Pharmaceutical Industries in China -- 2.3 Problems in the Development of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 2.3.1 Low R&amp -- D Investment in Pharmaceutical Companies -- 2.3.2 Vehicle for New Drugs R&amp -- D Is Research Institutions, Not Enterprises -- 2.3.3 Lack of Advanced Technology and IP Rights by Chinese Pharmaceutical Companies -- 2.3.4 Small-Scale Pharma Companies, Low Market Concentration and Substantial Percentage of Enterprises in Deficit -- 2.3.5 Increasing but Low Export of Traditional Chinese Medicine -- 3 Policy Structure of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 3.1 The Access to Drug Market and Approval of Drugs -- 3.1.1 Approval of New Drugs -- 3.1.2 The Generic Drug Application Procedure and Its Incentive System -- 3.2 Drug Pricing Policies -- 3.3 Regulatory Policies on Industrial Structure and Layout -- 4 The Market Structure of China's Pharmaceutical Industries -- 4.1 The High Expenditure Rate Under China's Medicare System -- 4.2 The Dominant Mode of Monopoly by Hospitals -- 4.2.1 The "Hospital and Pharmacy Together" Model Facilitates Drug Sales by Hospitals -- 4.2.2 The "Hospitals Supported by Medicines" Phenomenon Provides Hospitals with Monopoly Power -- 4.2.3 Drug Management Policies Conducive to Monopoly -- 4.2.4 The Supply and Demand Characteristics of the Medical Industry Conducive to Monopoly -- 4.3 China's Generic Drug Market -- 4.3.1 Generic Drugs Occupy the Drug Markets -- 4.3.2 The Opportunities upon Patent Expiration -- 5 IP Structure in Pharmaceutical Industries in China -- 5.1 The Patented Drug Market -- 5.1.1 The Demand for Drugs Against Infectious Diseases Relies on Patented Drugs -- 5.1.2 Patented Drugs Are More Profitable Than Generic Drugs -- 5.1.3 National Drug Price Negotiations Increased the Sales of Patented Drugs.
5.1.4 The Patent Linkage System Is Imperfect.
isbn 9789811381027
9789811381010
callnumber-first K - Law
callnumber-subject K - General Law
callnumber-label K4240-4343
callnumber-sort K 44240 44343
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oclc_num 1120056896
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hierarchy_parent_title ARCIALA Series on Intellectual Assets and Law in Asia Series
is_hierarchy_title Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China : Comparing Six Economic Sectors.
container_title ARCIALA Series on Intellectual Assets and Law in Asia Series
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fullrecord <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><collection xmlns="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim"><record><leader>12290nam a22004693i 4500</leader><controlfield tag="001">5005926997</controlfield><controlfield tag="003">MiAaPQ</controlfield><controlfield tag="005">20240229073833.0</controlfield><controlfield tag="006">m o d | </controlfield><controlfield tag="007">cr cnu||||||||</controlfield><controlfield tag="008">240229s2019 xx o ||||0 eng d</controlfield><datafield tag="020" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">9789811381027</subfield><subfield code="q">(electronic bk.)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="020" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="z">9789811381010</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(MiAaPQ)5005926997</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(Au-PeEL)EBL5926997</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="035" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">(OCoLC)1120056896</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="040" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">MiAaPQ</subfield><subfield code="b">eng</subfield><subfield code="e">rda</subfield><subfield code="e">pn</subfield><subfield code="c">MiAaPQ</subfield><subfield code="d">MiAaPQ</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="050" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="a">K4240-4343</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="100" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Liu, Kung-Chung.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="245" ind1="1" ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China :</subfield><subfield code="b">Comparing Six Economic Sectors.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="250" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1st ed.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="1"><subfield code="a">Singapore :</subfield><subfield code="b">Springer Singapore Pte. Limited,</subfield><subfield code="c">2019.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="c">©2019.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1 online resource (513 pages)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">text</subfield><subfield code="b">txt</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">computer</subfield><subfield code="b">c</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">online resource</subfield><subfield code="b">cr</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="490" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">ARCIALA Series on Intellectual Assets and Law in Asia Series</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China -- Contents -- About the Authors -- Introduction, Summary, and Some Inferences -- 1 Background -- 2 Methodology -- 3 Summary of the Findings of the Seven Study Groups -- 3.1 IP Codification and Innovation Governance -- 3.2 IT Industry -- 3.2.1 Current Status -- 3.2.2 Major Findings -- 3.3 Film Industry -- 3.3.1 Current Status -- 3.4 Pharmaceutical Industry -- 3.4.1 Current Status -- 3.5 Plant Varieties and Food Security -- 3.5.1 Current Status -- 3.6 Automobile Industry -- 3.6.1 Current Status -- 3.7 The Culture of Sharing and the Sharing Economy -- 3.8 Current Status -- Part I: IP Codification and Innovation Governance -- On the necessity of incorporating IP Laws into the Civil Law of China and How -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Establishment of IP Rights Has Revolutionized Property -- 3 Doctrinal and Practical Value of Codifying IP Laws into the Civil Law -- 3.1 The Civil Law Principally Guides IP Laws -- 3.2 Feedback from IP Theories and Systems to the Civil Law -- 4 Choice of Models for the Fusion Between IP Laws and the Civil Law -- 5 Relationship Between IP Laws, the General Provisions of the Civil Law and Its Respective Chapters -- 6 Technical Issues for Fusing IP Laws into the Civil Law -- 7 IP Laws and the Rule of Law in China -- Constitutional Governance in India and China and Its Impact on National Innovation -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Brief Introduction to the National Innovation System -- 3 Different Political Philosophy for Social Revolution and Social Justice -- 3.1 Social Revolution: Violent Revolution vs. Democratic Governance -- 3.2 Pursuing Social Justice: Transcendental Institutionalism vs. Realization-Focused Comparison -- 4 Power Distribution: Government Accountability vs. Policy Innovation.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">4.1 Vertical Power Distribution: Accountability vs. Local Innovation -- 4.2 Horizontal Power Distribution: Accountability vs. Policy Innovation -- 4.3 Constitutional Enforcement: Citizens' Rights vs. State Power -- 5 The Impact of Constitutional Governance on Economic Development Path and Innovation Strategy -- 5.1 Impact on Economic Development Path -- 5.2 Case Study on ICT of the Impact on Innovation Strategy -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Part II: IT Industry -- Information Technology Industry in China -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Economic Development Patterns and Characteristics in General -- 2.1 Development Patterns -- 2.2 Economic Development Characteristics -- 2.3 Identifying and Explaining Similarities and Differences -- 3 IT Industries: Two Kinds of Technical and Business Sectors -- 4 Comparing the Two Countries -- 4.1 Government Policies on IT Industries -- 4.1.1 China -- 4.1.2 India -- 4.2 Comparative Advantages of Chinese IT Companies -- 4.3 Comparative Advantages of Indian IT Companies -- 4.3.1 Strengths -- 4.3.2 Reasons Attributed to Stronger Competitiveness -- 4.3.3 Challenges -- 5 IP Factors in China and India -- 5.1 National-Level Patent Strategies -- 5.2 Firm-Level IP Strategies -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- India's Information Technology Industry: A Tale of Two Halves -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Computer Electronics Industry in India -- 2.1 Triggering the Development of the Industry -- 2.2 Facilitating the Growth of the Electronics Industry in the 1980s -- 2.3 Technology Imports and Domestic R&amp;amp -- D Behaviour -- 2.3.1 Domestic R&amp;amp -- D Behaviour: C-DAC and Param Supercomputer -- 2.4 Electronics Industry in the Period of Economic Reforms -- 2.5 Manufacturing -- 2.6 Strategic Role of Standards -- 3 India's Information Technology-Enabled Services -- 3.1 Evolution of the ITES Industry in India.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">3.2 The Beginnings of a Global ITES Hub -- 3.3 Consolidation of the Industry Since the Mid-1980s -- 3.4 Software Technology Parks and IT Clusters -- 3.5 India as an ITES Leader in the New Millennium -- 3.6 Current Status -- 3.7 R&amp;amp -- D, Innovation and Intellectual Property Rights -- 4 Patentability of Computer-Related Inventions in India -- 4.1 Yardsticks Followed by the CG Office to Deal with  Section 3(k) -- 4.1.1 The 2013 Guidelines -- 4.1.2 The 2015 Guidelines -- 4.1.3 The 2017 Guidelines -- 4.2 Court Decisions on Patenting of Computer Programmes -- 5 By Way of Conclusions -- References -- Part III: Film Industry -- Chinese Film Industry Under the Lens of Copyright, Policy, and Market -- 1 Early Cinema (1896-1930) -- 2 Wartime Cinema (1930-1949) -- 3 Socialist Cinema (1949-1978) -- 3.1 State-Owned and Policy-Controlled Cinema -- 3.2 Film Copyright Remained Unattended -- 4 Contemporary Cinema (1979-Present) -- 4.1 Recovery Period of Internal Reform -- 4.2 Cinema Marketization -- 4.2.1 The 1990 Copyright Law Set Up Basic Copyright Framework for the Film Industry -- 4.2.2 Further Reform in Film Distribution, Import, and Production -- 4.2.3 A Comprehensive Prior Approval System for Films -- 4.3 Industrialization -- 4.3.1 Further Liberalization of Import and Distribution of Foreign Films -- 4.3.2 Nationwide Cinema Chains -- 4.3.3 Further Liberalization of Film Production -- 4.3.4 Internet Giants Are Swarming into the Film Industry -- 4.3.5 Film Copyright -- 5 Challenges Ahead -- References -- Reminiscing About the Golden Age: An Analysis of Efforts to Revive the Hong Kong Film Industry Through the Lens of Copyright Protection -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Hong Kong Film Industry: Growth and Decline -- 2.1 Factors Within the Core Model of the Hong Kong Film Industry -- 2.2 External Factors.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">3 The Road to Revival of the Hong Kong Film Industry -- 3.1 Hong Kong Film Development Council -- 3.2 Hong Kong International Film and TV Market and Hong Kong International Film Festival -- 3.3 Film Development Fund -- 3.4 Create Hong Kong (CreateHK) and Hong Kong Arts Development Council -- 3.5 Closer Economic Partnership Agreement -- 4 The Implications of the Hong Kong Copyright Framework on the Film Revival -- 4.1 Co-authorship of Films -- 4.2 Unclear Scope of "Copy" and Insufficient Protection for Secondary Creation -- 4.3 Criminal Liability for Copyright Infringement -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Codes and Statutes -- Jurisprudence -- Books -- Journal Articles -- Official Reports -- Newspapers &amp;amp -- Websites -- Contemporary Challenges of Online Copyright Enforcement in India -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Piracy Landscape in India -- 3 Targeting End-Users: A Graduated Response Proposal -- 4 Website-Blocking Injunctions -- 5 Ad-Supported Piracy -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Continued Economic Benefit to the Author: Royalties in the Indian Film Industry - Historical Development, Current Status, and Practical Application -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Music Deals: Indian Context -- 3 Historical Perspective -- 3.1 Judicial Backdrop to the Amendments -- 3.2 The Problems with Copyright Societies in India -- 4 The New Royalties Regime -- 5 The Aftermath of the Amendments -- 6 Conclusion: The Way Forward -- References -- Part IV: Pharmaceutical Industry -- Pharmaceutical Industry in China: Policy, Market and IP -- 1 Approaches and Framework -- 2 Overview of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 2.1 The Historical Development -- 2.2 Current Status -- 2.2.1 Expansion of Total Industrial Scale -- 2.2.2 Improvement in Industrial Capacity -- 2.2.3 High Degree of Market Opening Up, Strong Market Shares by Foreign-Funded Enterprises.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">2.2.4 Administration of Pharmaceutical Industries in China -- 2.3 Problems in the Development of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 2.3.1 Low R&amp;amp -- D Investment in Pharmaceutical Companies -- 2.3.2 Vehicle for New Drugs R&amp;amp -- D Is Research Institutions, Not Enterprises -- 2.3.3 Lack of Advanced Technology and IP Rights by Chinese Pharmaceutical Companies -- 2.3.4 Small-Scale Pharma Companies, Low Market Concentration and Substantial Percentage of Enterprises in Deficit -- 2.3.5 Increasing but Low Export of Traditional Chinese Medicine -- 3 Policy Structure of China's Pharmaceutical Industry -- 3.1 The Access to Drug Market and Approval of Drugs -- 3.1.1 Approval of New Drugs -- 3.1.2 The Generic Drug Application Procedure and Its Incentive System -- 3.2 Drug Pricing Policies -- 3.3 Regulatory Policies on Industrial Structure and Layout -- 4 The Market Structure of China's Pharmaceutical Industries -- 4.1 The High Expenditure Rate Under China's Medicare System -- 4.2 The Dominant Mode of Monopoly by Hospitals -- 4.2.1 The "Hospital and Pharmacy Together" Model Facilitates Drug Sales by Hospitals -- 4.2.2 The "Hospitals Supported by Medicines" Phenomenon Provides Hospitals with Monopoly Power -- 4.2.3 Drug Management Policies Conducive to Monopoly -- 4.2.4 The Supply and Demand Characteristics of the Medical Industry Conducive to Monopoly -- 4.3 China's Generic Drug Market -- 4.3.1 Generic Drugs Occupy the Drug Markets -- 4.3.2 The Opportunities upon Patent Expiration -- 5 IP Structure in Pharmaceutical Industries in China -- 5.1 The Patented Drug Market -- 5.1.1 The Demand for Drugs Against Infectious Diseases Relies on Patented Drugs -- 5.1.2 Patented Drugs Are More Profitable Than Generic Drugs -- 5.1.3 National Drug Price Negotiations Increased the Sales of Patented Drugs.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">5.1.4 The Patent Linkage System Is Imperfect.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="590" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries. </subfield></datafield><datafield tag="655" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="a">Electronic books.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="700" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Racherla, Uday S.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="776" ind1="0" ind2="8"><subfield code="i">Print version:</subfield><subfield code="a">Liu, Kung-Chung</subfield><subfield code="t">Innovation, Economic Development, and Intellectual Property in India and China</subfield><subfield code="d">Singapore : Springer Singapore Pte. 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