TY - BOOK AU - Bottomley,Sean TI - British patent system and the industrial revolution 1700-1852 : from privilege to property T2 - Cambridge intellectual property and information law SN - 9781107058293 AV - KD1369 .B68 2014 U1 - 346.4860941 23 PY - 2014/// CY - United Kingdom PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Patent laws and legislation KW - Great Britain KW - History KW - Industrial revolution KW - Industrialization KW - LAW / Intellectual Property / General KW - bisacsh N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 295-315) and index; Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction; Part I. The Patent 'System': 2. The administration of patents: a poor man's tale?; 3. The jurisprudence of patents: the specification requirement; 4. Of patents and pirates: the adjudication of patent disputes; 5. The substantive development of patent law; Conclusion to Part I; Part II. Patents and Technology: 6. Patents and the Industrial Enlightenment; 7. The market in patent rights; 8. Patents and the Newcomen and Watt steam engines; 9. Capital, patents and the joint-stock company; Conclusion to Part II N2 - "The British Patent System and the Industrial Revolution 1700-1852 presents a fundamental reassessment of the contribution of patenting to British industrialisation during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It shows that despite the absence of legislative reform, the British patent system was continually evolving and responding to the needs of an industrialising economy. Inventors were able to obtain and enforce patent rights with relative ease. This placed Britain in an exceptional position. Until other countries began to enact patent laws in the 1790s, it was the only country where inventors were frequently able to appropriate returns from obtaining intellectual property rights, thus encouraging them to develop the new technology industrialisation required"-- ER -