There has been much written on the impact of international
treaties like the Trade Related Aspects on Intellectual Property
(TRIPS), which laments the failure of patent systems to respond to
the interests of a diverse set of non-profit, public interest, and
non-corporate entities. This book examines how patent law can
accommodate what James Boyle terms a "politics," that is, "a
conceptual map of issues, a rough working model of costs and
benefits, and a functioning coalition-politics of groups unified by
common interests perceived in apparently diverse situations."
A Politics of Patent Law provides a substantive account of the
ways in which various types of participatory mechanisms currently
operate in patent law, and examines how these participatory
mechanisms can be further developed, particularly within a regional
and international context. In exploring this, Murray highlights the
emergence of constitutional law in international intellectual
property law as being at the centre of the patent bargain and goes
so far as to argue that the constitutional tradition in
intellectual property law is as important as TRIPS. Ultimately, the
book sets forth a "tool-box" of participatory mechanisms which
would allow for, and foster third party participation in the patent
process. This book will be of particular interest to academics,
students and practitioners in the field of IP Law.
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