Book contents
- Patent Cultures
- Cambridge Intellectual Property and Information Law
- Patent Cultures
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Note on the Cover Image
- Part I Introductory
- Part II Americas
- Part III Southern Europe
- Part IV Central and Eastern Europe
- 10 The Struggle over “the Social Function of Intellectual Work in the Economy of Nations”
- 11 Multiple Loyalties
- 12 Patent Debates on Invention from Tsarist Russia to the Soviet Union
- Part V Asia
- Part VI Epilogue
- Index
- Cambridge Intellectual Property and Information Law
11 - Multiple Loyalties
Hybrid Patent Regimes in the Habsburg Empire and Its Successor States
from Part IV - Central and Eastern Europe
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2020
- Patent Cultures
- Cambridge Intellectual Property and Information Law
- Patent Cultures
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Note on the Cover Image
- Part I Introductory
- Part II Americas
- Part III Southern Europe
- Part IV Central and Eastern Europe
- 10 The Struggle over “the Social Function of Intellectual Work in the Economy of Nations”
- 11 Multiple Loyalties
- 12 Patent Debates on Invention from Tsarist Russia to the Soviet Union
- Part V Asia
- Part VI Epilogue
- Index
- Cambridge Intellectual Property and Information Law
Summary
In the mid-nineteenth century, it was the Habsburg Empire rather than any of the Germanic states that set the pattern for patent regulation in central Europe. Its statute for patent privileges in 1852 involved a strict definitions of novelty and explicit documentary demands for patent specifications across its territories. However, as the evolving German patent system became the dominant external reference point in later decades, leading figures in Austro-Hungary began to question its imperial patent system and looked increasingly to Berlin for their frameworks, although not excluding reference to Roman, French, and Anglo-American law. Thus a variety of legal traditions and intra-imperial debate wrought changes across the Austro-Hungarian territories that culminated in distinctive national systems once the Empire had dissolved in 1918. This chapter traces both the formal devolution from imperial to national patent systems in Austria, Hungary, Poland, and Czech regions as well as the persistent legal and technocratic imperatives that ultimately drew these legacy systems closer to each other again.
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- Patent CulturesDiversity and Harmonization in Historical Perspective, pp. 221 - 246Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020