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Case Studies of Successful Technology Transfer from Federal Laboratories

Author

Listed:
  • Jordan, Gretchen B.
  • Hayter, Christopher S.
  • Hogan, Michael
  • Gonzalez, Manuel A.
  • O’Connor, Alan C.

Abstract

In the United States, the Federal Government spends around $150 billion annually on Research and Development (R&D) at federal labs, universities, and research organizations. This investment in early-stage R&D together with the technology transfer process strengthened by the Stevenson-Wydler Act makes federal labs an important source of innovation that leads to products and processes with a private and social benefit. In this monograph, we present a structured case study approach to illustrate the benefits of the transferred research and technology as well as the circumstances that influenced the success of that transfer. Technology transfer from federal has widespread public benefits in areas that would not typically be addressed by the private sector and are difficult to quantify. The nine case studies presented span a mix of federal agencies, technology types, and transfer mechanisms. They illustrate a novel approach to matched case study research in this field, and explore the benefits, success factors, and lessons learned for federal managers. Each case presented a unique agency, transfer mechanism, and technology but illustrated some common success factors: deep research expertise, a clear demand environment, existing relationships, and legal mechanisms including licensing and CRADAs increased the likelihood of success. Research from federal labs requires a long-term commitment, but our case studies demonstrate how it can have widespread economic, environmental and public health benefits in addition to commercial benefits to the transfer recipient.

Suggested Citation

  • Jordan, Gretchen B. & Hayter, Christopher S. & Hogan, Michael & Gonzalez, Manuel A. & O’Connor, Alan C., 2021. "Case Studies of Successful Technology Transfer from Federal Laboratories," Annals of Science and Technology Policy, now publishers, vol. 5(3-4), pages 247-429, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:now:jlastp:110.00000019
    DOI: 10.1561/110.00000019
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