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The TRIPS Agreement (Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property Rights), signed on April 15, 1994, introduced
intellectual property protection into the World Trade
Organization's multilateral trading system for the first time, and
it remains the most comprehensive international agreement on
intellectual property to date. A Neofederalist Vision of TRIPS by
Graeme B. Dinwoodie and Rochelle C. Dreyfuss examines its
interpretation, its impact on the creative environment, and its
effect on national and international lawmaking. It propounds a
vision of TRIPS as creating a neofederalist regime, one that will
ensure the resilience of the international intellectual property
system in time of rapid change. In this vision, WTO members retain
considerable flexibility to tailor intellectual property law to
their national priorities and to experiment with changes necessary
to meet new technological and social challenges, but agree to
operate within an international framework. This framework, while
less powerful than the central administration of a federal
government, comprises a series of substantive and procedural
commitments that promote the coordination of both the present
intellectual property system as well as future international
intellectual property lawmaking. Part I demonstrates the centrality
of state autonomy throughout the history of international
negotiations over intellectual property. Part II, which looks at
the present, analyzes the decisions of the WTO in intellectual
property cases. It concludes that the WTO has been inattentive to
the benefits of promoting cultural diversity, the values inherent
in intellectual property, the rich fabric of its law and lore, the
necessary balance between producers and users of knowledge goods,
and the relationship between the law and the technological
environment in which it must operate. Looking to the future, Part
III develops a framework for integrating the increasingly
fragmented international system and proposes the recognition of an
international intellectual property acquis, a set of longstanding
principles that have informed, and should continue to inform
intellectual property lawmaking. The acquis would include both
express and latent components of the international regime, put
access-regarding guarantees such as user rights on a par with
proprietary interests and enshrine the fundamental importance of
national autonomy in the international system.
This timely Handbook marks a major shift in innovation studies,
moving the focus of attention from the standard intellectual
property regimes of copyright, patent, and trademark, to an
exploration of trade secrecy and the laws governing know-how, tacit
knowledge, and confidential relationships. The editors introduce
the long tradition of trade secrecy protection and its emerging
importance as a focus of scholarly inquiry. The book then presents
theoretical, doctrinal, and comparative considerations of the
foundations of trade secrecy, before moving on to study the impact
of trade secrecy regimes on innovation and on other social values.
Coverage includes topics such as sharing norms, expressive
interests, culture, politics, competition, health, and the
environment. This important Handbook offers the first modern
exploration of trade secrecy law and will strongly appeal to
intellectual property academics, and to students and lawyers
practicing in the intellectual property area. Professors in
competition law, constitutional law and environmental law will also
find much to interest them in this book, as will innovation
theorists. Contributors include: R.G. Bone, C.M. Correa, R.
Denicola, R.S. Eisenberg, V. Falce, H. First, J.C. Fromer, G.
Ghidini, C.T. Graves, M.A. Lemley, D.S. Levine, D.E. Long, M.L.
Lyndon, M.J. Madison, F.A. Pasquale, J.H. Reichman, M. Risch, P.
Samuelson, S.K. Sandeen, G. Van Overwalle, E. von Hippel, D.L.
Zimmerman
This timely Handbook marks a major shift in innovation studies,
moving the focus of attention from the standard intellectual
property regimes of copyright, patent, and trademark, to an
exploration of trade secrecy and the laws governing know-how, tacit
knowledge, and confidential relationships. The editors introduce
the long tradition of trade secrecy protection and its emerging
importance as a focus of scholarly inquiry. The book then presents
theoretical, doctrinal, and comparative considerations of the
foundations of trade secrecy, before moving on to study the impact
of trade secrecy regimes on innovation and on other social values.
Coverage includes topics such as sharing norms, expressive
interests, culture, politics, competition, health, and the
environment. This important Handbook offers the first modern
exploration of trade secrecy law and will strongly appeal to
intellectual property academics, and to students and lawyers
practicing in the intellectual property area. Professors in
competition law, constitutional law and environmental law will also
find much to interest them in this book, as will innovation
theorists. Contributors include: R.G. Bone, C.M. Correa, R.
Denicola, R.S. Eisenberg, V. Falce, H. First, J.C. Fromer, G.
Ghidini, C.T. Graves, M.A. Lemley, D.S. Levine, D.E. Long, M.L.
Lyndon, M.J. Madison, F.A. Pasquale, J.H. Reichman, M. Risch, P.
Samuelson, S.K. Sandeen, G. Van Overwalle, E. von Hippel, D.L.
Zimmerman
This book is the long-awaited companion volume to the highly
acclaimed Expanding the Boundaries of Intellectual Property,
published by Oxford University Press in 2001. That book argued for
strong private rights whilst at the same time calling for caution
in the expansionary trend. In the period since the first volume,
intellectual property protection has grown ever stronger, and this
new book focuses on finding ways to cope with the fragmentation of
rights and the complex framework this expansion of rights has
created. At the core of the book are considerations of such
initiatives as patent clearing models, standard setting
organizations, licensing arrangements and informal work-arounds. It
also examines the measures that seek to protect the public domain,
including strategic licensing, collective rights organizations, and
non-profit ventures such as creative commons and open-source
publishing. Drawing on expertise from a number of disciplines
including law, economics and sociology, the book is international
in approach and fuses scholarly research with legal practice. It
will be of great interest to scholars in intellectual property and
innovation, policy-makers, and practitioners with an interest in
the future of the field.
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