Details

Institutionalising Patents in Nineteenth-Century Spain


Institutionalising Patents in Nineteenth-Century Spain


Palgrave Studies in Economic History

von: David Pretel

58,84 €

Verlag: Palgrave Pivot
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 29.09.2018
ISBN/EAN: 9783319962986
Sprache: englisch

Dieses eBook enthält ein Wasserzeichen.

Beschreibungen

<p></p><p>This book examines the development of the Spanish patent system in the years 1826 to 1902, providing a fundamental reassessment of its evolution in an international context. The Spanish case is particularly interesting because of this country’s location on the so-called European periphery and also because of the centrality of its colonial dimension. Pretel gauges the political regulation and organisation of the system, showing how it was established and how it evolved following international patterns of technological globalisation and the emergence of the ‘international patent system’ during the late nineteenth century.</p>

Crucially, he highlights the construction and evolution of the patent system in response to the needs of Spain's technologically dependent economy.&nbsp;The degree of industrial backwardness in mid-nineteenth-century Spain set the stage for the institutionalisation of its modern patent system. This institutionalisation process also entailed the introduction of a new technological culture, social infrastructure and narrative that supported intellectual property rights. This book is important reading to all those interested in the history of patents and their role in globalisation.<p></p><br><p></p>
<p></p><p>Chapter 1: Institutionalising Backwardness.- Chapter 2: Making the System.- Chapter 3: Organising the System.- Chapter 4: The International Dimension.- Chapter 5: The Colonial Dimension.- Chapter 6: Inventing Late Industrialisation.</p><p></p>
<div><p><b>David Pretel</b>&nbsp;is Research Fellow at the Centre for Historical Studies, Colmex, The College of Mexico, Mexico. He specialises in the global history of technology, international economic history and the intellectual history of capitalism.</p><br></div>
<p></p><p>This book examines the development of the Spanish patent system in the years 1826 to 1902, providing a fundamental reassessment of its evolution in an international context. The Spanish case is particularly interesting because of this country’s location on the so-called European periphery and also because of the centrality of its colonial dimension. Pretel gauges the political regulation and organisation of the system, showing how it was established and how it evolved following international patterns of technological globalisation and the emergence of the ‘international patent system’ during the late nineteenth century.</p><p>Crucially, he highlights the construction and evolution of the patent system in response to the needs of Spain's technologically dependent economy.&nbsp;The degree of industrial backwardness in mid-nineteenth-century Spain set the stage for the institutionalisation of its modern patent system. This institutionalisation process also entailed the introduction of a new technological culture, social infrastructure and narrative that supported intellectual property rights. This book is important reading to all those interested in the history of patents and their role in globalisation.</p><div><b>David Pretel</b>&nbsp;is Research Fellow at the Centre for Historical Studies, Colmex, The College of Mexico, Mexico. He specialises in the global history of technology, international economic history and the intellectual history of capitalism.<br></div><p></p>
First English language text providing a history of the Spanish patent institution in the nineteenth century Adds an international content to the Spanish patent system, exploring global interconnections, exchanges, and networks Offers interdisciplinary research and discussion, in particular on the history of technology, business history, political economy, and science and technology studies
“Pretel’s brilliant and concise book explores the Spanish patent system during the second half of the 19th century. He shows how this system was in the hands of intermediaries, lawyers and consulting engineers, who provided a complete response to the necessities of companies in Spain and abroad, particularly large foreign industrial firms. The Spanish patent system was planned and organised to stimulate technology transfer and the dissemination of technologies from France, the UK and the USA as a response to the perceived industrial underdevelopment of the Spanish economy.” (Santiago M. López, University of Salamanca, Spain)<p>“David Pretel’s book offers an original and stimulating analysis of the ambiguous role of patents in Spanish economic history. It subtly highlights the contradictions of the system by looking at its practical implementation and at players as essential as patent agents.His approach at different scales makes his work a significant contribution to the history of globalisation.” (Gabriel Galvez-Behar, University of Lille, France)</p>

<p>“Pretel provides in his book a critical analysis of the Spanish patent system in the nineteenth century. It offers a nuanced and intelligent study of the legal and administrative institutions linked to technology in metropolitan Spain. The book contains a coherent narrative that provides new outlooks on the interplay among institutions, cultural and political change, technological development, and economic growth in peripheral countries of the Atlantic space before the Great War.” (Juan Pan-Montojo, Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain)</p>

Diese Produkte könnten Sie auch interessieren:

Supply Chain Management: Models, Applications, and Research Directions
Supply Chain Management: Models, Applications, and Research Directions
von: Joseph Geunes, Panos M. Pardalos, H. Edwin Romeijn
PDF ebook
149,79 €