1st Edition

Innovation Management and the Law An Institutional Approach

By Alexander Styhre Copyright 2025
    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    In economic theory and in management studies, innovation is widely regarded as the motor of economic activities and as being the primary source of renewal in the economic system. This view emphasizes how innovation work is organized in specialized teams inside the firm, or, alternatively, being located to start-ups and similar small ventures that are strongly incentivized to innovate to survive. Rather than to assume that innovation work is a mere product of incentives provided by the market system, being propelled by the individual and collective skills of the innovation team participants and the resources that they mobilize in their work, this volume examines how a market for innovation ideas is being constructed on basis of policy making and legislative activities. Innovation Management and the Law examines how the idea of value creation is understood to be a matter of innovation activities, and how such innovation activities are premised on legal rights that create not only incentives, corporations, and markets, but that more widely signal to market actors what kind of activities that are consistent with policy makers’ economic and social welfare objectives. The volume thus adds to the innovation management literature by introducing a comprehensive analysis of the patent system, illustrating that the patent system is itself an institution and that it should be examined in such terms when studying how innovations are generated on basis of team production activities and legal rights that are enforceable. It will be of interest to researchers, academics, professionals, and advanced students in the fields of management, economic theory, and law.

    Chapter One. Introduction: The legal basis of markets

     

    Chapter Two. Legal institutionalism and the question of legal coding

     

    Chapter Three. The patent as legal device

     

    Chapter Four. Patents as the legal coding of innovation ideas

     

    Chapter Five. The ethics and political economy of intellectual property rights

     

    Chapter Six. Law makes markets and market rules, and markets generate innovation: Legal institutionalism and its analytical benefits

    Biography

    Alexander Styhre is Chair of management and organization in the Department of Business Administration of the School of Business, Economics and Law at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.