O: Economic Development; Technological Change; and Growth
From Copyright EVIDENCE
Disciplines |
A full list of disciplines is available here |
O: Economic Development; Technological Change; and Growth is a discipline defined within the Copyright Evidence wiki. It is based on the JEL Discipline Classification System.
The following studies are coded as being associated with this discipline (12):
Citation | |
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Buccafusco, Burns, Fromer and Sprigman (2014) | Buccafusco, C. J., Burns, Z. C., Fromer, J. C., & Sprigman, C. J. (2014). Experimental Tests of Intellectual Property Laws’ Creativity Thresholds. Texas Law Review, 93, 1921. |
Cheliotis (2007) | Cheliotis, G. (2007). Remix culture: an empirical analysis of creative reuse and the licensing of digital media in online communities. |
DiCola (2013) | DiCola, P. (2013). Money from Music: Survey Evidence on Musicians' Revenue and Lessons About Copyright Incentives. Ariz. L. Rev., 55, 301. |
Erickson, Kretschmer and Mendis (2013) | Erickson, K., Kretschmer, M., & Mendis, D. (2013). Copyright and the Economic Effects of Parody: An Empirical Study of Music Videos on the YouTube Platform and an Assessment of the Regulatory Options. Intellectual Property Office Research Paper, (2013/24). |
Goel, Miesing and Chandra (2010) | Goel, S., Miesing, P., & Chandra, U. (2010). The impact of illegal peer-to-peer file sharing on the media industry. California Management Review, 52(3), 6-33. |
Hong (2007) | Hong, S. H. (2007). The recent growth of the internet and changes in household-level demand for entertainment. Information Economics and Policy, 19(3), 304-318. |
Joseph (2019) | Joseph, M. (2019). Commercialising on Copyrights: The Emergence of the Victorian Literary Agent. In Victorian Literary Businesses (pp. 83-116). Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. |
Kretschmer (2012) | Kretschmer, M. (2012). Does Copyright Law Matter? An Empirical Analysis of Creators’ Earnings. An Empirical Analysis of Creators’ Earnings (May 21, 2012). |
Lunney, Jr. (2012) | Lunney, Jr., G. S. (2012). Copyright’s Mercantilist Turn: Do We Need More Copyright or Less?. Tulane Public Law Research Paper, (12-20). |
Oliar, Pattison and Powell (2014) | Oliar, D., Pattison, N., & Powell, K. R. (2013). Copyright Registrations: Who, What, When, Where, and Why. Tex. L. Rev., 92, 2211. |
Scotchmer (2011) | Scotchmer, S. (2011). Ideas and Innovations: Which should be subsidized?. Available at SSRN 1755091. |
Somaya and Grahan (2006) | Somaya, D., & Graham, S. J. (2006). Vermeers and Rembrandts in the same attic: Complementarity between copyright and trademark leveraging strategies in software. Georgia Institute of Technology TIGER Working Paper. |