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A case study in innovation policymaking: standard contracts as a tool to improve university–industry collaboration
by
George, A J
, Tarr, Julie-Anne
in
Case studies
/ Collaboration
/ Colleges & universities
/ Commercialization
/ Contract negotiations
/ Contract theory
/ Contracting
/ Contracts
/ Cooperation
/ Cost control
/ Councils
/ COVID-19
/ Data analysis
/ Economic development
/ Education
/ Employment
/ Expenditures
/ Frame analysis
/ Government industry relations
/ Hypotheses
/ Industrial development
/ Innovations
/ Intellectual property
/ Jurisdiction
/ Literature reviews
/ Pandemics
/ Partnering
/ Policy making
/ Property
/ Qualitative analysis
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Stakeholders
/ Suitability
/ Theory
/ Toolkits
2024
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A case study in innovation policymaking: standard contracts as a tool to improve university–industry collaboration
by
George, A J
, Tarr, Julie-Anne
in
Case studies
/ Collaboration
/ Colleges & universities
/ Commercialization
/ Contract negotiations
/ Contract theory
/ Contracting
/ Contracts
/ Cooperation
/ Cost control
/ Councils
/ COVID-19
/ Data analysis
/ Economic development
/ Education
/ Employment
/ Expenditures
/ Frame analysis
/ Government industry relations
/ Hypotheses
/ Industrial development
/ Innovations
/ Intellectual property
/ Jurisdiction
/ Literature reviews
/ Pandemics
/ Partnering
/ Policy making
/ Property
/ Qualitative analysis
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Stakeholders
/ Suitability
/ Theory
/ Toolkits
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
A case study in innovation policymaking: standard contracts as a tool to improve university–industry collaboration
by
George, A J
, Tarr, Julie-Anne
in
Case studies
/ Collaboration
/ Colleges & universities
/ Commercialization
/ Contract negotiations
/ Contract theory
/ Contracting
/ Contracts
/ Cooperation
/ Cost control
/ Councils
/ COVID-19
/ Data analysis
/ Economic development
/ Education
/ Employment
/ Expenditures
/ Frame analysis
/ Government industry relations
/ Hypotheses
/ Industrial development
/ Innovations
/ Intellectual property
/ Jurisdiction
/ Literature reviews
/ Pandemics
/ Partnering
/ Policy making
/ Property
/ Qualitative analysis
/ R&D
/ Research & development
/ Stakeholders
/ Suitability
/ Theory
/ Toolkits
2024
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A case study in innovation policymaking: standard contracts as a tool to improve university–industry collaboration
Journal Article
A case study in innovation policymaking: standard contracts as a tool to improve university–industry collaboration
2024
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Overview
PurposeTo increase university–industry collaboration and research commercialisation, the Australian government recently introduced the Intellectual Property (IP) Framework, a set of online standard contracts. This follows a predecessor standard contract initiative, the IP Toolkit, which has not previously been evaluated. This paper aims to examine standard contracting in the innovation sector, tracing the policymaking behind the IP Toolkit using the lens of Macneil’s relational contract theory, to assess prospects of success for the new IP Framework, and similar initiatives in other jurisdictions.Design/methodology/approachThis is a disciplined-configurative case study, drawing on qualitative secondary data analysis and applying Macneil’s relational contracting theory to guide case construction and generate hypotheses around likely success of standard contracting initiatives (stakeholder sentiment, stakeholder adoption). Within-case analysis process-traces development of the IP Toolkit, to discover what the policymakers wanted, knew and computed – and to detail observable implications Macneil’s theory predicts. Its themes are triangulated with multiple sources.FindingsThe case study, via Macneil’s theory, confirms the first hypothesis (resistant stakeholder sentiment) and partly validates the second hypothesis (low levels of adoption), demonstrating limited suitability of standard contracting in the dynamic and highly uncertain space of university–industry collaboration.Research limitations/implicationsThe study provides insights into the limited role that standard contracts can play in improving national collaborative research and development performance.Originality/valueThis is a novel theory-driven case study triangulated with previously unpublished data on the IP Toolkit’s website usage, and data from recent consultations on the new IP Framework. It has broader implications for other jurisdictions considering adoption of the standard contract model.
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