← All articles

Photo · Gordon More

Creative Commons: Non-Proprietary Innovation Triangles in International Agricultural and Rural Development Partnerships

Laxmi Prasad Pant · 2010

Summary. Agricultural development in low-income countries is shifting from traditional technology transfer models toward innovation systems that involve public-private partnerships and open science practices. The paper argues that creative commons approaches generate innovation more effectively than proprietary intellectual property regimes, which often undermine indigenous and local community rights. Pluralistic innovation triangles now connect research, extension, and farming communities while promoting open science at the local level.

Read the original

Cite this article

Pant, L. P.. (2010). Creative Commons: Non-Proprietary Innovation Triangles in International Agricultural and Rural Development Partnerships. http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.174.3881

Details

Categories
agtech, innovation-networks, policy
Added
2026-04-28