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Casola, L., Kemp, S., & Mackenzie, A. (2009). Consumer decisions in the black market for stolen or counterfeit goods. Journal of Economic Psychology, 30, 162-171.
Three studies investigated hypothetical consumer behaviour in buying stolen, pirated or counterfeit goods from the black market. Study 1 found that both students and members of the general public rated the [...]
Swami, V., Chamorro-Premuzic, T., & Furnham, A. (2009). Faking it: Personality and individual difference predictors of willingness to buy counterfeit goods. The Journal of Socio-Economics, 38, 820-825.
Counterfeiting is now widely regarded as a serious social, economic, and political issue. This study examined demographic, personality, and individual difference predictors of willingness to buy counterfeit goods (WBCG) [...]
Berman, B. (2008). Strategies to detect and reduce counterfeiting activity. Business Horizons, 51, 191-199.
While at one time counterfeit products were largely restricted to watches, designer apparel, and movies, today counterfeiting is a major problem in such diverse product categories as pharmaceuticals, automotive parts, and computer software. There are four distinct types of counterfeits: knockoffs, counterfeits [...]
Stanziani, A. (2009). Information, quality and legal rules: Wine adulteration in nineteenth century France. Business History, 51, 268-291.
Nowadays global concerns are tightly linked to the way wine production and labelling have been regulated in France. This paper aims to provide an historical explanation of this peculiar regulation of the wine market in France. Our argument [...]
Blois, K., & Mandhachitara, R. (2002). Counterfeit software in Thailand: Controlling supply in an embedded system. Journal of Asian Business, 18.
The supply of counterfeited goods is large and growing worldwide, though the production and consumption of such items is particularly prevalent in Southeast Asia. Based on a survey this paper describes the supply and marketing [...]
Mitchell, V. W., & Kearney, I. (2002). A critique of legal measures of brand confusion. Journal of Product & Brand Management, 11, 357-379.
As the number of imitator brands has risen, so too have legal actions for trademark infringement and passing off, because of consumer confusion, unfair misappropriation of brand owners’ intellectual property, and lost sales [...]
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