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Reforming Intellectual Property brings together 19 of the world's
leading scholars in the field to offer their unique insight into
the future of intellectual property. Providing a diverse array of
perspectives on the most pressing reforms needed in the current IP
regime, whether in terms of legislation at national and
international levels, or interpretation of existing law, this
exceptional book highlights the key issues in this area and sets
out an agenda for future research and policy. Examining the
question of what changes to IP law and policy are most urgent and
would have the most impact, chapters cover a wide range of
subjects, with some focusing on specific topics such as the reform
of non-traditional trademarks, or the fair use and research
exemption in patent law. Other contributions take a broader
approach, such as a reappraisal of performers' rights in audio and
audiovisual media that encompasses implications for creativity,
welfare and ethics in the film industry, and a proposal for the
creation of an International Intellectual Property Treaty. This
book will prove to be crucial reading for all scholars and students
of IP law, as well as policymakers and practitioners in the field.
It will also be of interest to researchers working in related
fields such as competition and human rights law for its
intersecting analysis of these areas.
The fields of intellectual property have broadened and deepened in
so many ways that commentators struggle to keep up with the
ceaseless rush of developments and hot topics. Kritika: Essays on
Intellectual Property is a series that is designed to help authors
escape this rush. It creates a forum for authors who wish to more
deeply question, investigate and reflect upon the evolving themes
and principles of the discipline. The essays in this 5th volume in
the series come from authors who, after a lifelong engagement with
various fields of intellectual property (including its
socio-economic foundations), reflect on the events and processes
that, in their scholarly experience, most significantly impacted on
the great evolutionary trends in their particular fields. These
reflections span a wide arc from the contradictory history of the
regulation of employee inventions and works, to the status of
intellectual property as market regulation under public
international law; from the trajectories of trade mark protection
in the European Union, to the paradigmatic changes copyright law
has undergone as a result of technological change; from the
influence of the human rights movement on perceptions of
intellectual property, to the pendulum swings of patent protection
in gene technology inventions; and finally, from the impact of the
TRIPS Agreement and bilateral TRIPS plus agreements on IP in the
pharmaceutical sector, to the continuing development of copyright
for works of art and of the resale right in the PR China. With
contributions from: Niklas Bruun, Thomas Cottier, Annette Kur,
Hector L. MacQueen, Sam Ricketson, Dianne Nicol, Jayashree Watal,
Zhou Lin
Intellectual property law is built on constitutional foundations
and is underpinned by the twin freedoms of freedom of expression
and freedom of economic enterprise. In this thoughtful evaluation,
Gustavo Ghidini offers up a reconstruction of the core features of
each intellectual property paradigm, including patents, copyright,
and trademarks, suggesting measures for reform to allow
intellectual property to become socially beneficial for all.
Rethinking Intellectual Property is a deeply reflective
conceptualisation of the modern principles of intellectual property
law at both a national and an international level. The first
chapter investigates conflicts of interests relating to
intellectual property and guiding principles for their resolution
within its constitutional framework. Ghidini then moves on to
examine the reshaping of patent protection, and the way that the
exercise of patent rights goes hand-in-hand with the competitive
dynamics of technological innovation. In chapter 3, he analyses the
copyright paradigm from an industrial perspective, focusing
particular attention to the online distribution of material.
Chapter 4 moves on to examine trademark protection, and the
protection of entrepreneurial identity and brand value. Finally, he
addresses the complex intersection between intellectual property
law and competition law. This book will be invaluable reading for
anyone interested in the conceptual foundations of intellectual
property law, and challenges the reader to re-examine their
understanding of the field.
The fields of intellectual property have broadened and deepened in
so many ways that commentators struggle to keep up with the
ceaseless rush of developments and hot topics. Kritika: Essays on
Intellectual Property is a series that is designed to help authors
escape this rush. It creates a forum for authors who wish to more
deeply question, investigate and reflect upon the evolving themes
and principles of the discipline. This second volume of Kritika,
like the first, sees its contributors writing on core themes and
concepts of intellectual property. The essays deal with the current
limits of economic knowledge and approaches to intellectual
property; China's approach to innovation and intellectual property;
a functional and constructivist account of intellectual property
rights; the evolution of the essential facilities doctrine,
including in the Chinese context; the emergence of multi-layered IP
protection for designed objects; the changing balance of the
interests of trade mark proprietors, competitors and consumers; the
interaction between place and non-agricultural geographical
indications; and the trajectory of increased protection for
intellectual property and some of its likely consequences. With
contributions from: Giuseppe Colangelo; Vincenzo Di Cataldo; Susy
Frankel; Johanna Gibson; Keith E. Maskus; Roberto Pardolesi; Thomas
Riis; Jens Schovsbo; Ken Shao and Michel Vivant
The fields of intellectual property have broadened and deepened in
so many ways that commentators struggle to keep up with the
ceaseless rush of developments and hot topics. Kritika: Essays on
Intellectual Property is a series that is designed to help authors
escape this rush. It creates a forum for authors who wish to more
deeply question, investigate and reflect upon the evolving themes
and principles of the discipline. This third volume of Kritika
again brings together leading scholars from different fields and
disciplines. Their essays reflect on some of the big problems in
the field, addressing issues such as the way that institutions like
WIPO continue with their propertization missions, how the bells of
lobbyists toll incessantly for new data rights, and the ways in
which discourses of human rights and information justice struggle
to turn intellectual property from an instrument of private
accumulation into one of service for the common good. Important
questions in the field are also tackled, for example, how does the
Islamic view of knowledge as life cohere with intellectual
property, at a time when, as other essays show, intellectual
property grounds new forms of state imperium? With contributions
from: Sara Bannerman; Shamnad Basheer; Rahul Bajaj; Mohammed El
Said; Blayne Haggart; Thomas Hoeren; P. Bernt Hugenholtz and Fiona
Macmillan
The new millennium has carried several challenges for patent law.
This up-to-date book provides readers with an important overview of
the most critical issues patent law is still facing today at the
beginning of the twenty first century, on both sides of the
Atlantic. New technological sectors have emerged, each one with its
own features with regard to innovation process and pace. From the
most controversial cases in biotech to the most recent decisions in
the field of software and business methods patent, patent law has
tried to stretch its boundaries in a way to accommodate such new
and controversial subject matters into its realm. Biotechnology and
Software Patent Law will strongly appeal to postgraduate students
specializing in IP law, international law, commercial and business
law, competition law as well as IP scholars, academics and lawyers.
Contributors: S.D. Anderman, R.B. Bakels, S.J.R. Bostyn, D.L. Burk,
V. Di Cataldo, V. Falce, C. Geiger, R.M. Hilty, C.M. Holman, M.A.
Lemley, A. Ottolia, J. Pila, J.R. Thomas, P.L.C. Torremans
The fields of intellectual property have broadened and deepened in
so many ways that commentators struggle to keep up with the
ceaseless rush of developments and hot topics. Kritika: Essays on
Intellectual Property is a series that is designed to help authors
escape this rush. It creates a forum for authors who wish to more
deeply question, investigate and reflect upon the evolving themes
and principles of the discipline. Bringing together leading experts
in intellectual property, this fourth volume of Kritika tackles
head on the most pressing legal issues that lie at the heart of the
contemporary marketplace. The topics in this volume include the
possible futures of IP; the challenges that the information age
poses for rational code design and the protection of social
interests; the changing purpose of unfair competition law; the
Durkheimian basis for a more socially inclusive form of IP; the
reality of IP on the legal streets of Brazil; the shortfalls of
intellectual property as dominium and the issue of rights to
machine-generated and automated data. With contributions from:
Pedro Marcos Nunes Barbosa, Rochelle C. Dreyfuss, Severine
Dusollier, Valeria Falce, Mark Findlay, Frake Hennine-Bodewig and
Hans-Wolfgang Micklitz
This rich and challenging book offers a critical appraisal of the
relationship between intellectual property law and competition law,
from a particularly European perspective. Gustavo Ghidini
highlights the deficiencies in studying each of these areas of law
independently and argues for a more holistic approach, insisting
that it is more useful, and indeed essential, to consider them as
interdependent. He does this first by examining how competition and
intellectual property (IP) converge, diverge, and inform one
another. Secondly, he assesses how IP law can be interpreted
through the guiding principles of competition law - antitrust and
unfair competition - and within the overarching principle of free
competition. The book traces the evolution of modern IP law, which
it claims is marked heavily both by 'over-protectionist' trends -
such as the extension of copyright law to technological fields,
where it trespasses on the territory of patent law - and by
attempts to monopolize the achievements of basic research, such as
in the example of biotechnology. Through an examination of such
emerging issues as access to standards of information and patenting
of genetic materials, the author makes a clear case for a reading
of IP law that promotes dynamic processes of 'innovation by
competition', and 'competition by innovation', with related
benefits to consumer welfare such as wider choices, greater access
to culture and information, and lower prices. Advanced students and
researchers in all areas of intellectual property will find this
book a stimulating alternative to traditional interpretations of
the subject.
This authoritative book provides a comprehensive critical overview
of the basic IP paradigms, such as patents, trademarks and
copyrights. Their intersection with competition law and their
impacts on the exercise of social welfare are analysed from an
evolutionary perspective.The analyses and proposals presented
encompass the features and rationales of a legal field in constant
evolution, and relate them to increasingly rapid technological,
economic, social and geo-political developments. Gustavo Ghidini
highlights the emerging trends that challenge the traditional
a??all-exclusionarya?? vision of IP law and its application. The
author expertly combines holistic, evolutionary and
constitutionally oriented approaches, with the search for a
rebalancing of the IP rights holdersa?? positions with citizensa??
and usersa?? rights.This book will appeal to academics, scholars
and lawyers specializing in the realm of intellectual property,
competition and comparative law.
TRIPS reflects the dominant view that enforcing strong intellectual
property rights is necessary to solve problems of trade and
development. The global ensemble of authors in this collection ask,
how can TRIPS mature further into an institution that supports a
view of economic development which incorporates the human rights
ethic already at work in the multilateralist geopolitics driving
international relations? In particular, how can these human rights,
seen as encompassing a whole 'new' set of collective interests such
as public health, environment, and nutrition, provide a pragmatic
ethic for shaping development policy? Some chapters address these
questions by describing recent successes, while others propose
projects in which these human rights can provide ethical ground for
influencing the forces at play in development policies.This
stimulating book will strongly appeal to policy makers, academics,
and students seeking to understand how the 'new' human rights can
inform efforts to reconfigure intellectual property rights as an
engine for fair and just economic development. Contributors: L.
Briceno Moraia, J.L. Contreras, L. Dong, G. Ghidini, A. Kur, M.
Land, M. Levin, D. Matthews, C.R. McManis, J. Odek, R.J.R. Peritz,
H. Rangel-Ortiz, M. Ricolfi
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