Ribeiro Barbara, Shapira Philip
Manchester Institute of Innovation Research, Alliance Manchester Business School, University of Manchester, United Kingdom.
Manchester Synthetic Biology Research Centre for Fine and Speciality Chemicals (SYNBIOCHEM), University of Manchester, United Kingdom.
Res Policy. 2020 Feb;49(1):103875. doi: 10.1016/j.respol.2019.103875.
Emerging science and technology fields are increasingly expected to provide solutions to societal grand challenges. The promise of such solutions frequently underwrites claims for the public funding of research. In parallel, universities, public research organizations and, in particular, private enterprises draw on such research to actively secure property rights over potential applications through patenting. Patents represent a claim to garner financial returns from the novel outcomes of science and technology. This is justified by the potential social value promised by patents as they encourage information sharing, further R&D investment, and the useful application of new knowledge. Indeed, the value of patents has generated longstanding academic interest in innovation studies with many scholars investigating its determinants based on econometric models. Yet, this research has largely focused on evaluating factors that influence the market value of patents and the gains from exclusivity rights granted to inventions, which reflect the private value of a patent. However, the patent system is a socially shaped enterprise where private and public concerns intersect. Despite the notion of the social utility of inventions as a patenting condition, and evidence of disconnection between societal needs and the goals of private actors, less attention has been paid to other interpretations of patent value. This paper investigates the various articulations of value delineated by patents in an emerging science and technology domain. As a pilot study, we analyse patents in synthetic biology, contributing a new analytical framework and classification of private and public values at the intersections of science, economy, and society. After considering the legal, business, social and political dimensions of patenting, we undertake a qualitative and systematic examination of patent content in synthetic biology. Our analysis probes the private and public value propositions that are framed in these patents in terms of the potential private and public benefits of research and innovation. Based on this framework, we shed light on questions of what values are being nurtured in inventions in synthetic biology and discuss how attention to public as well as private values opens up promising avenues of research in science, technology and innovation policy.
新兴科学技术领域越来越被期望为社会重大挑战提供解决方案。此类解决方案的前景常常成为研究获得公共资金支持的依据。与此同时,大学、公共研究机构,尤其是私营企业利用此类研究,通过申请专利积极确保对潜在应用的产权。专利代表着从科技新成果中获取经济回报的主张。专利具有潜在的社会价值,因为它们鼓励信息共享、进一步的研发投资以及新知识的有益应用,这为专利提供了正当理由。事实上,专利的价值在创新研究领域引发了长期以来的学术兴趣,许多学者基于计量模型研究其决定因素。然而,这项研究主要集中在评估影响专利市场价值以及授予发明的排他权所带来收益的因素,这些因素反映了专利的私人价值。然而,专利制度是一个私人与公共利益相互交织的社会构建企业。尽管发明的社会效用是专利授予的条件,且有证据表明社会需求与私人行为主体的目标之间存在脱节,但对专利价值的其他解读却较少受到关注。本文研究了新兴科学技术领域中专利所界定的各种价值表述。作为一项试点研究,我们分析合成生物学领域的专利,为科学、经济和社会交叉领域的私人和公共价值贡献了一个新的分析框架和分类。在考虑了专利的法律、商业、社会和政治维度之后,我们对合成生物学领域的专利内容进行了定性和系统的考察。我们的分析从研究与创新的潜在私人和公共利益角度,探究了这些专利中所阐述的私人和公共价值主张。基于这一框架,我们阐明了合成生物学发明中正在培育哪些价值的问题,并讨论了关注公共价值和私人价值如何为科学、技术和创新政策开辟了有前景的研究途径。