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Community Organizations De Gruyter Open
De Gruyter Open
De Gruyter Open
Publishing Company
Phone number
+48 22 701 50 15

Location

Bogumila Zuga 32a Str.
01-811
Warsaw
Poland
Working languages
inglés

De Gruyter Open (formerly Versita)  is one of the world’s leading publishers of open access scientific content. Today De Gruyter Open (DGO) publishes about 600 own and third-party scholarly journals across all major disciplines.


The company was established in 2001 and is now part of the De Gruyter publishing group degruyter.com. Since 2006 De Gruyter Open has been a member of Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers and International Association of Scientific, Technical & Medical Publishers. De Gruyter Open’s book and journal programs have been endorsed by the international research community and some of the world’s top scientists – Nobel Prize Winners included. The company is on the constant mission to make best scientific content freely available to all scholars and readers alike.

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Resources

Displaying 16 - 17 of 17

Strategic Public Policy Toward Agricultural Biotechnology with Externalities in Developing Countries

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2004

Game theory and numerical simulation analyze the host government's role in strategically regulating intellectual property rights (IPRs) for agricultural biotechnology in a developing country. A foreign monopolist imports and sells a genetically modified crop variety that will offer the host country both selective productivity gains and a negative externality. In this small open economy, only some heterogeneous producers adopt the new variety. Public policy consists of IPR enforcement and a corrective tax.

Agricultural Biotechnology: Productivity, Biodiversity, and Intellectual Property Rights

Journal Articles & Books
Diciembre, 2004

This paper argues that current forms of agricultural biotechnology have significant potential for developing countries; the challenge is to realize this potential. We develop a conceptual model that explains why the yield effects of GMVs (genetically modified varieties) tend to be significant and reduce chemical use, contributing to human welfare, and present results from empirical studies that support these findings. We demonstrate that the adoption of GMVs might not necessarily lead to elimination of many varieties. Instead, crop biodiversity may be enhanced.