Essay Topic Hub

Patents
Essays

482+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

482 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Patents are legal instruments that grant inventors exclusive rights to their creations for a defined period, and they sit at the intersection of law, economics, and business strategy. In law courses, patents are studied as a form of intellectual property protection, raising questions about innovation incentives, market competition, and access to technology. The topic is especially rich in pharmaceutical and biotechnology contexts, where the tension between protecting research investments and ensuring public access to essential products generates ongoing legal and policy debate. Trade-related frameworks such as TRIPs bring an international dimension to these questions, making patents relevant across business law, health law, and international trade courses alike.

Student papers on this topic approach patents from several angles. Case analyses, such as those examining Monsanto Co v. David and litigation involving companies like Microsoft, ground abstract legal principles in concrete disputes over enforcement and infringement. Other papers take an industry-focused approach, exploring how patents shape competitive strategy in pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and technology sectors. Policy-oriented work examines generics, biologics, and biosimilars, assessing how patent expiration and regulatory frameworks affect product markets. Some papers adopt a business strategy lens, analyzing how companies build alliances and joint ventures partly around patent portfolios.

A strong essay on patents establishes a clear, narrow thesis rather than attempting to survey all of patent law at once. The most persuasive arguments rely on specific case precedent, statutory language, or documented industry data as evidence. Writers should connect legal rules to their real-world effects on companies and consumers to demonstrate analytical depth. The most common pitfall is treating patents as purely technical legal formalities, overlooking how economic incentives and business strategy shape the way they are sought, licensed, and contested.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Marketing management principles and practices
Sony Corporation is a global leader in the research & development, design and manufacturing of optics-based products including high-resolution digital cameras for personal and professional use.
Paper Doctorate
Yahoo! A Critical Analysis Yahoo! History Problem
Yahoo! is one of the pioneers of what virtual internet world looks like today. Incorporated with the sole objective of providing internet service to both end-users and businesses, Yahoo! has transformed into more than that. It was founded by David Filo and Jerry Yang in 1995. Since then Yahoo! has enjoyed the status of market leader for several years. However with introduction of Google and tough competition from organizations like Microsoft, Yahoo! has failed to retain its old status. In fact, recently it is struggling to revamp the company's structure and vision which may respond to the robust market requirement.
Paper Undergraduate
Trademark issues in intellectual property law
Men2Wimmin does not have a very strong case in this regard, either in obtaining injunctive relief against Clean Clothes for the use of the tagline, "Masculine Attitude, Feminine Fit," or in obtaining any damages for the…
Paper Undergraduate
Capital Budgeting, Innovation, and Product Development Strategy
¶ … distinguish between net present value and the internal rate of return. What are some common problems associated with analyses based on discounted cash flows.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Fen-Phen Disaster to Top Pharmaceutical
Wyeth represents a "hidden gem" in the pharmaceutical business. This report seeks to show how difficult experiences since 1997 have resulted in Wyeth emerging as a financially successful firm with one of the deepest…
Research Paper Doctorate
International Relations and Biology
While there is little controversy over many aspects of biotechnology and its application, genetically modified (GM) foods have become the target of intense controversy. This controversy in the marketplace has resulted…
Essay Doctorate
Strategic Direction of Apple in the Enterprise
Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) has emerged as one of the most profitable and prolific companies in the world, generating a market capitalization rate of $623B as of this writing in late August, 2012, delivering $148B in Revenues in their latest fiscal year and $40B in Net Income (Apple Investor Relations, 2012). One of Apple's greatest strengths is its ability to quickly translate innovative product concepts and designs into state-of-the-art products that deliver exceptional customer experiences. Apple has honed this through decades of disciplined execution and a continual focus on creating a highly synchronized supply chain, highly collaborative product design and development workflows, and the ability to take concepts to completed products in a fraction of the time of their competitors (Murray, Goode, Muro, 2010). Apple is credited with creating the smartphone market, tablet PC, cloud-based music buying and delivery service (iTunes), centralized document and image storage (iCloud) and more innovations in operating systems in the last five years than Microsoft (Apple Investor Relations, 2012). All of these accomplishments taken together have led to Apple creating a catalyst of growth in the tablet PC market, fueling a 100%+ increase in iPad sales (13% year over year) and iPhone sales that have increased 152% over the last eighteen months as well (Apple Investor Relations, 2012). Apple continues to accelerate the sales of their iPad, iPhone, iTouch devices in addition to its mainstream laptops and systems. Apple is able to accomplish these significant results by concentrating on the execution of its value chain, a decades-only concept that Dr. Michael Porter originally created to illustrate how the functional departments of a company all must be synchronized to deliver profitability (Porter, 2008). Apple's value chain is exceptionally effective in managing the coordinating of supply chain, sourcing, quality management, production, product design, marketing services, logistics and retailing operations. As long as two decades ago Apple had been concentrating on how to create this level of synchronization across their entire enterprise (Larson, 1994). As the business model of Apple has continually become more complex, the ability of the organization to stay agile and quick to respond has increasingly become more difficult. This is a common problem companies have as they grow in size and complexity of their business models. For Apple, the environmental factors in the areas of economic, social, technological and political change have challenged their ability to grow, and also forced them to create a more market-driven organizational structure, abandoning the highly successful product divisions of the 1990s and early 2000 timeframe (Apple Investor Relations, 2012). The intent of this analysis is to evaluate how Apple is managing to continually grow despite economic, social, technological and political environmental forces impacting their business. In addition, an analysis of their market environment, response to the turbulent economic environment they operate in, the nature of their product strategies, an assessment of their strategic direction and strategic options are all included in this analysis. A separate section is included for each of these areas throughout the analysis. The Porter Fives Forces Model is used for analyzing these market dynamics (Porter, 2008).
Essay Doctorate
Diversifiable and undiversifiable risk in inflation and recession scenarios
Diversifiable risk is specific to a particular asset where undiversifiable risk is the tendency of stock prices to decrease, being caused by something that affects returns on all stocks. The capital asset pricing model is a tool that is used to determine the riskiness of individual assets and the overall portfolio.
Essay Doctorate
Google\'s Strategy Is to Deliver High Quality
Google's strategy is to deliver high quality content that drives advertising revenue online. This strategy is supported by a high level of innovation, by offering end users (web surfers) high value content.
Paper Doctorate
Full body scanning at airports
The approval and the disapproval of the whole body imaging technologies incorporated by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security at all the major airports, has raised fascinating questions about the technology and its utilization of airport scanners. Put into place as a way of escalating the security in the airports, the airport body scanners have the capability to produce high quality images to find metallic or non metallic threats