1st Edition

Innovation, Investment and Intellectual Property in South Korea Park to Park

By Ruth Taplin Copyright 2018
    112 Pages
    by Routledge

    122 Pages
    by Routledge

    South Korea known as the hermit kingdom was wrenched from its isolation in the mid-seventies with the forced industialisation of its economy by Park Chung-hee during his dictatorial regime. This led South Korea to becoming the most rapidly industialised country in the world with world class technology and a population who are largely digitally proficient. The course is charted from the rule of Park Chung-hee to his democratically elected daughter President Park Geun-hye who is now on trial for corruption. The legacy of the Park to Park era is not only the most fruitful in Korean history but the most tumultuous, most recently because of the accelerated nuclear ambitions of North Korea. The analysis is through the framework of investment, innovation and intellectual property rights and the double edged sword of cult and rapid action, so central to Korean culture.

    Preface

    Title Page

    Acknowledgements

    Author's biography

    Contents

    Abbreviations

    Chapters

    1 Innovation, Investment and Intellectual Property in South Korea: Park to Park

    2 Chaebols as vehicles of innovation and investment and IPR

    3 Influence of Japan on the ROK-Park to Park

    4 Intellectual Property Rights

    5 Competition Law

    6 Maritime Sector

    7 Information and Telecommunications Sector

    8 Electronics sector and renewable energy

    9 The North Korean Factor

    10 Conclusion

    Index

    Biography

    Ruth Taplin received her doctorate from the London School of Economics and has a GDL in Law. She is the author/editor of 20 books and over 200 articles, and was the first featured author for Routledge in Asian Studies. She wrote freelance for The Times newspaper for nine years on Japan, Taiwan, Korea and was a consultant to the Federation of Electronics Industry for nine years. She studied Japanese at Durham University over 20 years ago as part of a special course for future leaders in the Japanese field in the UK in tandem with the Nissan Institute, Oxford University. She is an Honorary Advisor to the Society for Interdisciplinary Business Research and is occasionally invited by the United Nations to act as an innovation expert because of her entrepreneurial experience as an innovator. 

     Professor Taplin is the editor of Interdisciplinary Journal of Economics and Business Law (www.ijebl.co.uk) founded by her seven years ago, in addition to being Director of The Centre for Japanese and East Asian Studies, which won Exporter of the Year 2000 for Partnership in Trading/Pathfinder. She has had a number of visiting affiliations with universities globally including Visiting Professor at Osaka City University, Visiting Professor at the Faculty of Management, University of Warsaw, Poland, a Visiting Fellow at the University of Mumbai in January 2007 and in January 2008/April 2009 at the University of Bacheshir in Istanbul. In 2014 she was Visiting Professor in Nepal and keynote speaker at a conference there. She has also worked for a number of law firms specialising in intellectual property around the world on a project-by-project basis using her knowledge of East Asian intellectual property and intellectual property valuation. 

    She can be reached at [email protected]

    "How to make sense of what is going on in South Korea,  both in terms of its huge shipping industry and the wider industrial and political realm? A new book by Prof Ruth Taplin, an economist with inside experience of East Asia, provides essential context and a pathway to a holistic understanding of the boom and bust trajectory of the johnny-come-lately of the shipping markets." — James Brewer, Former Insurance Editor Lloyd's List, http://www.allaboutshipping.co.uk/2018/06/10/innovation-investment-and-intellectual-property-in-south-korea/

    "In her most comprehensive but eminently readable book Ruth Taplin has produced a "must read" for any foreign enterprise or individual wanting to do business in South Korea. Ruth draws attention to how fundamental to doing business in the ROK is an understanding of the workings of the chaebol. She provides very valuable insights particularly into the way Samsung and its owning family operates but also points to the fact that there are some key differences into how others are managed. Again, please let me congratulate Ruth on this extremely valuable contribution to understanding how to do business in South Korea." — Mack Williams, Australian Ambassador to South Korea 1994-1998, Former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Sydney, Australia