Difference between revisions of "Team:UNSW Australia/Human Practices/Law"

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<p>The <b>availability</b> of grant <b>money</b> to fund the research also determines what projects can be undertaken – a project ineligible for grant money is far less likely to go ahead.</p>
 
<p>The <b>availability</b> of grant <b>money</b> to fund the research also determines what projects can be undertaken – a project ineligible for grant money is far less likely to go ahead.</p>
  
<p>There is also a <b>correlation</b> between the likely <b>patentability</b> of an invention, or area of science, and the amount of research <b>funding</b> which goes into the area. The Australian Bureau of Industry Economics 1994 Report stated that legal protection seems to ‘increase the incentive for investment in research and development, in a reasonably cost effective way’, and there has not been any significant change from this position in Australia.<sup><a href=#references>5</a></sup>  More evidence of this correlation comes from the US, where 80% of the money spent on non-commercial pharmaceutical research comes from public sources.<sup><a href=#references>6</a>; <a href=#references>7</a></p>
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<p>There is also a <b>correlation</b> between the likely <b>patentability</b> of an invention, or area of science, and the amount of research <b>funding</b> which goes into the area. The Australian Bureau of Industry Economics 1994 Report stated that legal protection seems to ‘increase the incentive for investment in research and development, in a reasonably cost effective way’, and there has not been any significant change from this position in Australia.<sup><a href=#references>5</a></sup>  More evidence of this correlation comes from the US, where 80% of the money spent on non-commercial pharmaceutical research comes from public sources.<sup><a href=#references>6</a>; <a href=#references>7</a></sup></p>
  
  

Revision as of 06:49, 15 October 2018

Law and Regulation