Working Knowledge Employee Innovation and the Rise of Corporate Intellectual Property, 1800-1930

Skilled workers of the early nineteenth century enjoyed a degree of professional independence because workplace knowledge and technical skill were their "property," or at least their attribute. In most sectors of today's economy, however, it is a foundational and widely accepted truth...

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Hlavní autor: Fisk, Catherine L
Médium: E-kniha Kniha
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press 2009
University of North Carolina Press
Vydání:1
Edice:Studies in Legal History
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ISBN:9780807833025, 0807833029, 1469622203, 9781469622200
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  • Front Matter Table of Contents ACKNOWLEDGMENTS INTRODUCTION PART I: WORKPLACE KNOWLEDGE AS A PERSONAL ATTRIBUTE, 1800–1860 1: Stealing in the Dark the Improvements of Others 2: The Genius Which Conceived and the Toil Which Compiled the Book PART II: FREE LABOR, FREE ENTERPRISE, AND THE FREEDOM TO CONTRACT OVER INNOVATION, 1860–1895 3: If These Mill Owners Desire to Cripple a Man’s Enterprise and His Energy and Intelligence, They Must Contract to That Effect 4: An Ingenious Man Enabled by Contract 5: They Claim to Own Him, Body and Soul PART III: WORKPLACE KNOWLEDGE AS CORPORATE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, 1895–1930 6: Corporate Management of Science and Scientific Management of Corporations 7: The Corporation’s Money Paid for the Painting; Its Artist Colored It; Its President Designed It CONCLUSION. NOTES BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX
  • 7. The Corporation’s Money Paid for the Painting; Its Artist Colored It; Its President Designed It 4. An Ingenious Man Enabled by Contract PART III: WORKPLACE KNOWLEDGE AS CORPORATE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, 1895–1930 5. They Claim to Own Him, Body and Soul 3. If These Mill Owners Desire to Cripple a Man’s Enterprise and His Energy and Intelligence, They Must Contract to That Effect PART II: FREE LABOR, FREE ENTERPRISE, AND THE FREEDOM TO CONTRACT OVER INNOVATION, 1860–1895 2. The Genius Which Conceived and the Toil Which Compiled the Book 1. Stealing in the Dark the Improvements of Others PART I: WORKPLACE KNOWLEDGE AS A PERSONAL ATTRIBUTE, 1800–1860 Introduction Acknowledgments 6. Corporate Management of Science and Scientific Management of Corporations Contents Title Page, Copyright, Dedication Cover Bibliography Index Notes CONCLUSION. Attribution, Authenticity, and the Corporate Production of Technology and Culture
  • Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- PART I: WORKPLACE KNOWLEDGE AS A PERSONAL ATTRIBUTE, 1800-1860 -- 1. Stealing in the Dark the Improvements of Others -- 2. The Genius Which Conceived and the Toil Which Compiled the Book -- PART II: FREE LABOR, FREE ENTERPRISE, AND THE FREEDOM TO CONTRACT OVER INNOVATION, 1860-1895 -- 3. If These Mill Owners Desire to Cripple a Man's Enterprise and His Energy and Intelligence, They Must Contract to That Effect -- 4. An Ingenious Man Enabled by Contract -- 5. They Claim to Own Him, Body and Soul -- PART III: WORKPLACE KNOWLEDGE AS CORPORATE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, 1895-1930 -- 6. Corporate Management of Science and Scientific Management of Corporations -- 7. The Corporation's Money Paid for the Painting -- Its Artist Colored It -- Its President Designed It -- CONCLUSION. Attribution, Authenticity, and the Corporate Production of Technology and Culture -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y