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EU Competition Law and Intellectual Property Rights - The Regulation of Innovation (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
Loot Price: R3,877
Discovery Miles 38 770
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EU Competition Law and Intellectual Property Rights - The Regulation of Innovation (Paperback, 2nd Revised edition)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Widely read and appreciated in its first edition by students,
academics and junior practitioners, EU Competition Law and
Intellectual Property Rights was the first book to offer an
accessible introduction to the interface between competition law
and intellectual property rights.
Now fully updated, but retaining the accessible approach, it
continues to represent an ideal gateway to this increasingly
dynamic interface, offering a sound introduction to the topic based
on thorough legal analysis. It provides a foundation to EU
competition law rules as they relate to intellectual property
rights, and explores how such a template can be applied to existing
intellectual property rights and adapted to new technologies such
as telecommunications and information technology. It demonstrates
how, both under the EU law and as a matter of economic policy, EU
competition law must provide a set of outer limits to, and a
framework of rules which regulate, the exploitation and licensing
of intellectual property rights.
A group of landmark cases since the first edition - the Microsoft
case and its predecessor concerned with database rights, the IMS
case - has extended the scope of Article 102 TFEU to a refusal to
license interface codes. Article 102 has also been applied in the
Astra Zeneca case to regulate the behavior of pharmaceutical
companies and the pharmaceutical sector has recently experienced a
sectoral enquiry. Finally, the field of industrial standards,
patent ambushes and FRAND obligations has become the subject of
competition law scrutiny. Under Article 101 TFEU, the modernization
reforms and the new Technology Transfer Block Exemption Regulation
772/2004 together with the Technology Transfer Guidelines have
quite radically reformed the method that lawyers must use when
analysing the limits of clauses in intellectual property licensing.
It requires greater economic understanding, offers less legal
certainty but allows more flexibility than its predecessor. The
book offers a comprehensive insight to these new developments in a
textbook style ideal for those approaching the subject for the
first time, or a useful reference for those with more experience.
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