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Hamilton, Clovia; Philbin, Simon P. – Online Submission, 2020
Research and technology commercialization at research-intensive universities has helped to develop provincial economies resulting in university startups, the growth of other new companies and associated employment. University technology transfer offices (TTOs) oversee the process of technology transfer into the commercial marketplace and these…
Descriptors: Technology Transfer, Commercialization, Research Universities, Knowledge Management
Hamilton, Clovia – Online Submission, 2020
There is a concentrated number of potential women entrepreneurs of diverse races among faculty in the United States' Historically Black Colleges and Universities (known as HBCUs and are called 'Black Colleges' herein). This study describes the potential for developing university technology transfer in these Black Colleges as a strategy for…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, Females, Women Faculty, Entrepreneurship
Hamilton, Clovia – Online Submission, 2018
Since 1980 universities have been able to commercialize inventions that their faculty researchers create as per the 1980 Bayh-Dole Act (P.L. 96-517). Research universities can now own and license these inventions to small and well established companies. Since 1980, research universities have used tech commercialization to support their regional…
Descriptors: Research Universities, Intellectual Property, Innovation, Technological Advancement
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Hamilton, Clovia – Online Submission, 2015
Between 2005 and 2011, there was no substantial growth in licenses executed by university technology transfer offices. Since the passage of the Bayh Dole Act of 1980, universities have owned technological inventions afforded by federal research funding. There are still university technology transfer offices that struggle with increasing their…
Descriptors: Universities, Technology Transfer, Attention, Income