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Human Rights and the WTO - The Case of Patents and Access to Medicines (Hardcover)
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Human Rights and the WTO - The Case of Patents and Access to Medicines (Hardcover)
Series: International Economic Law Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The international trading system has come under increasing attack
by activists as being in conflict with human rights law. Others
have defended the system as contributing more to the fulfilment of
human rights than many other areas of international law. This study
examines the alleged conflict of WTO law with international human
rights law, using one of the most prominent examples of such a
conflict: that between international patent law, ie the TRIPS
Agreement, and access to medication as guaranteed eg by the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.
This highly controversial political issue of the appropriate use of
international patent law on life saving medicines gained the
world's attention during the discussion about the price of AIDS
medication, but recent instances also include the availability of
the patented medication for bird flu and for anthrax. The book
discusses both the patent law and the international human rights
law involved in great depth, distinguishing between obligations
under different human rights instruments and including a highly
readable introduction into both areas of law. It then explains the
concept of conflict between legal regimes and why patent law and
human rights law are in conflict. The current state of
international law on the conflict between legal regimes and the
origin of such conflicts is analyzed, covering such issues as
hierarchy in international law and introducing the concept of
'factual hierarchy'. The book then turns to the role of human
rights law in the WTO system, concluding that such law currently is
limited to aiding the interpreting of the WTO agreements. It shows
how a further integration of human rights law could be achieved and
describes the progress made towards accommodating human rights
concerns within the TRIPS Agreement, culminating in the first ever
decision to amend a core WTO Agreement in December 2005.
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