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OCR for page R1
Si m p ~ if led and Standard ized
Model Agreements for
University-~ndustry
Cooperative Research
GOVERNNENT-UNIVERSITY-
INDUSTRY RESEARCH
ROUNDTABLE
National Academy Press
Washington, D.C.
INDUSTRIAL
RESEARCH
INSTITUTE
1 988
OCR for page R2
The Government-University-Industry Research Roundtable
The Government-University-Industry Research Roundtable is sponsored by the
National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, and Institute of
Medicine. The Research Roundtable was created in 1984 to provide a forum where
scientists, engineers, administrators, and policymakers from government, university,
and industry can come together on an ongoing basis to explore ways to improve the
productivity of the nation's research enterprise. The object is to try to
understand issues, to inject imaginative thought into the system, and to provide a
setting for discussion and the seeking of common ground. The Roundtable does not
make recommendations, nor offer specific advice. It does develop options and bring
all interested parties together. The uniqueness of the Roundtable is in the breadth
of its membership and in the continuity with which it can address issues.
.
The Industrial Research Institute
The Industrial Research Institute (T.R.~.) was founded In 1938 under the
auspices of the National Research Council. Its purposes are to promote, through the
cooperative efforts of its members, improved, economical, and effective techniques
of organization, administration, and operation of industrial research, including
means for more effective interaction with other corporate functions; to generate
understanding and cooperation between the academic and industrial research
communities; to afford a means for industry to cooperate effectively with government
in matters related to research; to stimulate and develop an understanding of
research as a force in economic, industrial, and social activities; to encourage
high standards in the field of industrial research; and to promote communication and
interaction with industrial research organizations in other countries. I.R.I. is an
association of some 260 major industrial companies that provides a means for the
coordinated study of problems confronting managers of industrial research and
development.
Publications are available from:
Government-Uni~crsity-Industry Rcscarch Roundtable
National Academy of Sciences
National Academy of Engineering
Institute of Medicine
2101 Constitution Avenue NW (NAS342)
Washington, DC 20418
(202) 334-3486
Printed in the United States of America
OCR for page R3
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OCR for page R4
We expect that you will find these models useful as starting points for
negotiations when setting up agreements. We would like to know how they worked, and
would appreciate your responses to questions such as:
o Were the models an effective tool in the negotiation process?
O Did using the models save you time and effort in reaching an accord?
O What were areas that required negotiation? What were the resolutions?
What areas did both parties agree to readily, but were different than presented
in the models?
What modifications In the models do you propose?
Your comments will be most helpful to as in considering future modifications of the
models to reflect the most reasonable and effective starting point for negotiations
for cooperative research agreements.
/' / James D. Ebert
~ Chairman
J Research Roundtable
..
:
,
S. Allen Heininger~
President
Industrial Research Institute