
Contents
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10.1 Introduction 10.1 Introduction
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10.2 Assistive Technologies and the Patent System 10.2 Assistive Technologies and the Patent System
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10.3 Bridging the Gap 10.3 Bridging the Gap
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10.4 Patents as a Creative Incentive 10.4 Patents as a Creative Incentive
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10.4.1 The Patent System and Technological Creativity 10.4.1 The Patent System and Technological Creativity
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10.5 Redefining Technological Creativity 10.5 Redefining Technological Creativity
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10.6 Patents: Impediments to Innovation? 10.6 Patents: Impediments to Innovation?
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10.7 Alternatives to the Patent System 10.7 Alternatives to the Patent System
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10.8 Conclusion 10.8 Conclusion
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References References
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10 The Patent System, Assistive Technologies, and the Developing World
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Published:October 2021
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Abstract
Although many assistive devices are created in advanced economies, the developing world has been responsible for numerous creative solutions. Despite this, according to the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), the clear majority of patenting activity in this field occurs in developed countries. Developing countries, which generate comparatively few issued patents, engage in significant innovation using forms of creativity that are not rewarded under the Global North’s patent standards. Developing nations can respond to this circumstance through a number of mechanisms. One is to modify the existing patentability standards to capture more types of creative endeavors. Such an approach should be considered thoughtfully, as the patent system has the potential for both positive and negative consequences for developing nations. Alternatively, nations can adopt other forms of incentives (such as grants or other rewards) to encourage the development of new assistive technologies for their domestic creators.
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