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The book includes thorough coverage of developments in Japan, which, as the country where significantly more new patents are registered each year than in any other country, is particularly important for this subject.
Accounting --- Commerce --- Business & Economics --- Intangible property --- Intellectual property --- Valuation --- IP (Intellectual property) --- Proprietary rights --- Rights, Proprietary --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangibles --- Law and legislation --- Property
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For the recorded history of management, the world has managed value creation according to what can be seen, touched and proven. In today's knowledge-based economy, value creation is derived primarily from how well firms manage intangibles (knowledge, service, expectations, response time, innovation, change management, etc). The large capital outlays that signified the manufacturing economy are no longer required. In fact, such 'tangibles' now explain less than 20% of the value of most publicly listed firms. For example, Time Warner has only 6.49% of its value attributable to tangibles. As such
Intellectual capital --- Intangible property --- Knowledge management. --- Management. --- Accounting. --- Valuation. --- Management of knowledge assets --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangibles --- Law and legislation --- Management --- Information technology --- Organizational learning --- Property
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In the knowledge economy, the value of corporations is directly related to their knowledge and intellectual capital. But broaden the perspective a little wider and you begin to see the possibilities: Think of cities, regions, even entire nations, in addition to the public sector. If intangibles and intellectual capital are important to the private sector, they are also important to the productivity and competitiveness of the public sector, and so to communities and nations as a whole. In this book, Editors Ahmed Bounfour and Leif Edivinsson have brought together the best minds in intellectual
Intellectual capital. --- Intangible property --- Knowledge management. --- Management. --- Management of knowledge assets --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangibles --- Capital, Intellectual --- Law and legislation --- Management --- Information technology --- Intellectual capital --- Organizational learning --- Property --- Human capital --- Knowledge management --- Knowledge workers
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This book covers intangible cultural heritage (ICH) governance through an Asia-Pacific context, making reference to the historical development of the international instruments guiding ICH policy. With a review of the 2003 Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritageas development, this work provides an understanding into why the Convention is the way it is, how it is developing, and how to apply it in different situations. Furthermore, dedicating sections to explain good governance and the manner through which the 2003 Convention hopes to influence good governance in the ICH field, the book will help readers to understand the major issues and barriers to good governance in this field. In addition, the case studies integrated in this volume provide tools and context with which to analyze ICH and ICH governance. Overall, the central questions answered in this work are What is governance in terms of ICH safeguarding?a and How do interactions between global and local governance develop?a The included experimental strategies for enhancing ICH safeguarding governance offer a glimpse into what may be possible. - - As the 2003 Convention is still relatively young, there is a need for in-depth research that covers the core governance issues that have arisen over the past decade. This book, being unique in its direct focus on ICH governance, will help fill this information gap and give readers a concise reference point for such issues. - - -
Cultural property --- Intangible property --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangibles --- Property --- Cultural heritage --- Cultural patrimony --- Cultural resources --- Heritage property --- National heritage --- National patrimony --- National treasure --- Patrimony, Cultural --- Treasure, National --- World Heritage areas --- Protection --- Law and legislation
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Are intellectual property rights a threat to autonomy, global justice, indigenous rights, access to lifesaving knowledge and medicines? The essays in this volume examine the justification of patents, copyrights and trademarks in light of the political and moral controversy over TRIPS (the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights). Written by a distinguished international group of experts, this book draws on the latest philosophical work on autonomy, equality, property ownership and human rights in order to explore the moral, political and economic implications of property rights in ideas. Written with an interdisciplinary audience in mind, these essays introduce readers to the latest debates in the philosophy of intellectual property, whether their interests are in the restrictions that copyright places on the reproduction of music and printed words or in the morality and legality of patenting human genes, essential medicines or traditional knowledge.
Intellectual property. --- Intangible property. --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangible property --- Intangibles --- Property --- Intellectual property --- IP (Intellectual property) --- Proprietary rights --- Rights, Proprietary --- Law and legislation --- E-books --- LAW / Intellectual Property / General --- Law --- General and Others
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This book asserts that intangibles create financial transactions, not vice versa. It offers distinct, reproducible methods of valuing intangibles in intangible forms, with associated and meaningful financial values. It also presents new management frameworks in which all forms of intangibles can be classified, measured, managed, and reported.*A practical, hands-on guide to a new approach to valuing intangibles*Progresses from simple to complex, using case studies that begin with short simple cases and progress to comprehensive real-life case studies*Highlights the distinction
Accounting. --- Intangible property. --- Intangible property - Accounting. --- Intangible property - Accounting - Standards. --- Intangible property - Valuation. --- Intangible property--Accounting. --- Intellectual capital. --- Intellectual capital - Management. --- Intellectual capital--Management. --- Knowledge management. --- Management. --- Standards. --- Valuation. --- Intellectual capital --- Intangible property --- Knowledge management --- Management --- Business & Economics --- Management Styles & Communication --- Accounting --- Standards --- Valuation --- Management of knowledge assets --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangibles --- Law and legislation --- Information technology --- Organizational learning --- Property
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Why should a property interest exist in an intangible item? In recent years, arguments over intellectual property have often divided proponents-who emphasize the importance of providing incentives for producers of creative works- from skeptics who emphasize the need for free and open access to knowledge.In a wide-ranging and ambitious analysis, Robert P. Merges establishes a sophisticated rationale for the most vital form of modern property: IP rights. His insightful new book answers the many critics who contend that these rights are inefficient, unfair, and theoretically incoherent. But Merges' vigorous defense of IP is also a call for appropriate legal constraints and boundaries: IP rights are real, but they come with real limits.Drawing on Kant, Locke, and Rawls as well as contemporary scholars, Merges crafts an original theory to explain why IP rights make sense as a reward for effort and as a way to encourage individuals to strive. He also provides a novel explanation of why awarding IP rights to creative people is fair for everyone else in society, by contributing to a just distribution of resources. Merges argues convincingly that IP rights are based on a solid ethical foundation, and-when subject to fair limits-these rights are an indispensable part of a well-functioning society.
LAW --- Intellectual Property / General --- Intellectual property --- Intangible property --- Law, Politics & Government --- Law, General & Comparative --- Philosophy --- Intangible property. --- Philosophy. --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangibles --- IP (Intellectual property) --- Proprietary rights --- Rights, Proprietary --- Law and legislation --- Property --- E-books --- Intellectual property - Philosophy --- Intangible property - Philosophy
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Reputation risk is a topic with relevance across the organisation, from risk managers to corporate communication managers, from compliance manager to HR Director. Whatever your interest in the subject, A Short Guide to Reputation Risk provides a shorthand route to understanding the context and key features of this subject.
Corporate image. --- Intangible property -- Valuation. --- Risk assessment. --- Risk management. --- Risk assessment --- Risk management --- Corporate image --- Intangible property --- Management Styles & Communication --- Management --- Business & Economics --- Valuation --- -659.2 --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangibles --- Property --- Company image --- Corporate identity --- Corporations --- Industrial design coordination --- Insurance --- Analysis, Risk --- Assessment, Risk --- Risk analysis --- Risk evaluation --- Evaluation --- Law and legislation --- Public relations --- Valuation.
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Intangible assets such as knowledge or brands are increasingly important to companies. Such assets are essentially needed to develop new innovative products and to introduce them to the market. Philipp Sandner is one of the first researchers to approach the valuation of both technology- and market-based intangibles simultaneously by relying on portfolios of intellectual property (IP) derived from patents and trademarks. He empirically analyzes how technology- and market-based assets drive the company value of stock market listed companies. He finds that both patents and trademarks substantially contribute to the value of companies.
Intangible property. --- Business enterprises --- Valuation. --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangibles --- Business. --- Marketing. --- Leadership. --- Business and Management. --- Business Strategy/Leadership. --- Intangible property --- Property --- Law and legislation --- Consumer goods --- Domestic marketing --- Retail marketing --- Retail trade --- Industrial management --- Aftermarkets --- Selling --- Ability --- Command of troops --- Followership --- Marketing
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This book examines the role of intangible assets (IA) in companies and countries for achieving sustainable economic growth. The authors particularly focus on Sweden and other Nordic countries to analyse the IA gap using a systematized “IA metrics” approach. They also discuss the incentives needed for strategic investments into useful IA to gain national competitiveness from an economic, social and environmental policy perspective. The authors contend that despite the increasing importance of IA and intellectual capital (IC) in the economy, the current discussion has only been centered on intellectual property, which is one of the more prominent forms of intangibles. As this book demonstrates, IC and IA encompass wider dimensions of human, process, market, and renewal capital, among others. Featuring real case examples from Spotify, Minecraft and Izettle, this book offers a strategy for the resurrection of competitive advantage in the globalized economy and the advancement of some key United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Accounting. --- Bookkeeping . --- Industrial management—Environmental aspects. --- Development economics. --- Accounting/Auditing. --- Corporate Environmental Management. --- Development Economics. --- Accountancy --- Business enterprises --- Commerce --- Commercial accounting --- Finance --- Financial accounting --- Business --- Bookkeeping --- Economics --- Economic development --- Double entry bookkeeping --- Business education --- Accounting --- Intangible property --- Incorporeal property --- Intangible assets --- Intangibles --- Property --- Law and legislation
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