D42: Monopoly

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Disciplines
A full list of disciplines is available here

D42: Monopoly 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 (8):

 Citation
Handke and Towse (2007)Handke, Christian, and Ruth Towse. Economics of copyright collecting societies. International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law 38.8 (2007): 937-957.
Heald (2014a)Heald, P. J. (2014). How Copyright Keeps Works Disappeared. Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, 11(4), 829-866.
Libson and Parchomovsky (2019)Lisbon, A. and Parchomovsky, G. (2019), Toward the Personalization of Copyright Law, University of Chicago Law Review, Vol. 86 No. 2.
Liebowitz (2008a)Liebowitz, S.J. (2008) Is the Copyright Monopoly a Best-Selling Fiction? Technology Policy Working Paper, September 2008
Oestreicher-Singer and Sundararajan (2010)Oestreicher-Singer, G., & Sundararajan, A. (2010). Are digital rights valuable? Theory and evidence from ebook pricing.
Thomes (2013)Thomes, Tim Paul. An economic analysis of online streaming music services. Information Economics and Policy 25.2 (2013): 81-91.
Towse (2013)Towse, Ruth. The economic effects of digitization on the administration of musical copyrights. Review of Economic Research on Copyright Issues 10.2 (2013): 55-67.
Yoon (2002)Yoon, K. The optimal level of copyright protection. Information Economics and Policy 14.3 (2002): 327-348.