Studies on Impact and Utilization of the Intellectual Property System: A CDIP Project Initiative

The World Intellectual Property Organization's (WIPO) Committee on Development and Intellectual Property (CDIP) has developed a series of specialized studies that analyze different dimensions of the impact and utilization of intellectual property systems. These reports, resulting from the project "Systematization of statistical data and the design and implementation of a methodology for conducting impact studies on the use of the intellectual property system" (CDIP/26/4), offer a comprehensive and multidimensional perspective on the role of IP in development.

Series of thematic reports

Use of IP

This report offers a dynamic analysis of trends and patterns in the utilization of the intellectual property system, providing key indicators on national inventive and creative activity.

Innovation ecosystems

This report provides a comprehensive study on how different actors in the national innovation system interact through intellectual property, identifying synergies and opportunities for strengthening.

Subnational innovation ecosystems

This report provides a territorial analysis that examines regional and local particularities in IP utilization, revealing disparities and specific potentialities of each territory.

Gender and IP

This report evaluates women's participation in the IP system, identifying gender gaps and proposing strategies to promote inclusion in innovation and creativity.

Innovation capabilities

This study conducts a diagnosis of the scientific, productive, and technological competencies necessary to maximize the utilization of the intellectual property system as a development tool.

Presentations

The presentations available in this section were developed based on the training sessions conducted in the different pilot countries — Bhutan, Côte d'Ivoire, El Salvador, and Indonesia. These training sessions covered five key thematic areas:

Datasets

The datasets were collected across the four pilot countries — Bhutan, Côte d'Ivoire, El Salvador, and Indonesia — and served as the empirical foundation for the elaboration of the thematic reports. These datasets cover four key thematic areas:

Innovation ecosystems

Subnational innovation ecosystems