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El. knyga: Protecting Intellectual Property in the Arabian Peninsula: The GCC states, Jordan and Yemen

(Princess Nourah Bint Abdulrahman University, Saudi Arabia), (Charles Darwin University, Australia)

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This work examines the endeavours of the Arabian Peninsula States – namely the Gulf Cooperation Council member States of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar Saudi Arabia and the UAE, as well as Jordan and Yemen as prospective GCC members – in establishing national intellectual property protection regimes which both meet their international treaty obligations and are also congruent with their domestic policy objectives. It uses the WTO’s TRIPS Agreement of 1995 as the universal benchmark against which the region’s laws are assessed. The challenges faced by the States in enforcing their intellectual property laws receive particular attention. Protecting Intellectual Property in the Arabian Peninsula considers the changing nature of the States’ intellectual property laws since 1995. It argues that the decade immediately following the TRIPS Agreement was marked by a period of foreign forces shaping or influencing the character of the States’ intellectual property legislative regimes, primarily through multilateral or bilateral trade-based agreements. The second and current decade, however, see a significant shift away from foreign influences and a move towards domestic and regional imperatives and initiatives taking over. The work also examines regional initiatives for the protection of traditional knowledge and cultural heritage, as areas of intellectual property which fall outside the parameters of the TRIPS Agreement, but which are of significant concern to the States and other developing countries, and to which they are giving increasing attention in terms of providing proper protection.
List of tables xi
Preface xiii
Acknowledgements xv
List of abbreviations xvii
1 Protecting intellectual property in the Arabian Peninsula - introduction and context 1(16)
1.1 Introduction
1(2)
1.2 The Arabian Peninsula States and the development of intellectual property laws
3(3)
1.3 The WTO, TRIPS and the globalisation of intellectual property rights
6(4)
1.3.1 The global pressures
6(2)
1.3.2 The Arabian Peninsula States' response to the pressures
8(2)
1.4 Multilateralism by the backdoor - the strategy of bilateralism
10(3)
1.5 Structure of the work
13(2)
1.6 Concluding remarks
15(2)
2 'The golden thread that binds' - the Shariah and intellectual property protection 17(21)
2.1 Introduction - 'the golden thread'
17(3)
2.2 The Shariah and the Arabian Peninsula State constitutions
20(5)
2.3 The Shariah and the judicature
25(6)
2.4 The Shariah and intellectual property protection
31(5)
2.5 Concluding remarks
36(2)
3 Pre-TRIPS and intellectual property protection in the Arabian Peninsula 38(41)
3.1 Introduction
38(2)
3.2 Early regional initiatives on intellectual property protection
40(8)
3.2.1 Trademarks
41(5)
3.2.2 Patents
46(1)
3.2.3 Copyright
47(1)
3.3 Examples of early regional intellectual property legislation
48(10)
3.3.1 The Bahraini Patents, Designs and Trade Marks Regulation of 1955
49(4)
3.3.2 The Kuwaiti Patents Law of 1962
53(2)
3.3.3 The Jordanian Trademark Law of 1952
55(3)
3.4 Protection by association - non-intellectual property sources of protection
58(5)
3.5 The pre-TRIPS status of intellectual property protection
63(9)
3.5.1 Trademarks
63(1)
3.5.2 Patents and industrial designs
64(2)
3.5.3 Copyright
66(6)
3.6 Some external influences
72(3)
3.6.1 The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
72(1)
3.6.2 The Arabian Peninsula States and the WIPO relationship
73(2)
3.7 Concluding remarks - a prelude to TRIPS
75(4)
4 TRIPS and copyright and the nature of compliance in the Arabian Peninsula 79(35)
4.1 Introduction - the context of TRIPS and its conventions
79(4)
4.2 TRIPS and the Arabian Peninsula States
83(3)
4.2.1 National treatment and most-favoured-nation treatment
83(3)
4.3 Copyright and neighbouring rights
86(19)
4.3.1 TRIPS copyright provisions and obligations (Articles 9-14)
86(2)
4.3.2 Current regional copyright legislation
88(2)
4.3.3 The subject matter of copyright protection
90(2)
4.3.4 Terms of protection
92(3)
4.3.5 Moral rights and economic rights
95(5)
4.3.6 Translated works and compulsory licensing
100(1)
4.3.7 Management of collective rights
101(1)
4.3.8 Infringements
101(4)
4.4 Copyright in the digital environment
105(7)
4.4.1 Background
105(3)
4.4.2 Technological protection measures and rights management
108(2)
4.4.3 Liability of internet service providers
110(2)
4.5 Concluding remarks
112(2)
5 TRIPS and industrial property and the nature of compliance in the Arabian Peninsula 114(66)
5.1 Introduction
114(1)
5.2 Trademarks
114(15)
5.2.1 TRIPS provisions and obligations (Articles 15-21)
114(1)
5.2.2 Trademark laws in the Arabian Peninsula States
115(4)
5.2.3 Scope of protection for trademarks
119(4)
5.2.4 Well-known marks
123(1)
5.2.5 Rights of ownership
124(2)
5.2.6 Classifications system for goods and services
126(2)
5.2.7 Infringements
128(1)
5.3 Geographical indications
129(6)
5.3.1 TRIPS provisions and obligations (Articles 22-24)
129(1)
5.3.2 Geographical indications (GIs) in the Arabian Peninsula
130(2)
5.3.3 Nature and scope of a geographical indication
132(2)
5.3.4 Additional protection for wines and spirits
134(1)
5.4 Industrial designs
135(6)
5.4.1 TRIPS industrial designs provisions and requirements (Articles 25-26)
135(1)
5.4.2 Industrial design laws in the Arabian Peninsula
136(1)
5.4.3 Character and scope of an industrial design
137(3)
5.4.4 Infringements
140(1)
5.5 Patents
141(17)
5.5.1 TRIPS provisions and obligations (Articles 27-34)
141(1)
5.5.2 Patent laws in the Arabian Peninsula
142(4)
5.5.3 Patentability scope and criteria
146(4)
5.5.4 Rights conferred by a registered patent
150(3)
5.5.5 Compulsory licensing
153(3)
5.5.6 Infringements
156(1)
5.5.7 Yemen's 'right to a discovery'
157(1)
5.6 Layout designs (topographies) of integrated circuits
158(7)
5.6.1 TRIPS provisions and obligations (Articles 35-38)
158(1)
5.6.2 Layout-design laws in the Arabian Peninsula
159(2)
5.6.3 Nature and scope of a layout design
161(3)
5.6.4 Infringements
164(1)
5.7 Undisclosed information, trade secrets and anti-competitive practices
165(7)
5.7.1 TRIPS provisions and obligations (Articles 39-40)
165(1)
5.7.2 Current regional undisclosed information and anti-competitive practices provisions
166(3)
5.7.3 Nature of protection of undisclosed information
169(1)
5.7.4 Protection of information relating to pharmaceutical products
170(1)
5.7.5 Control of anti-competitive practices in contractual licences
171(1)
5.8 Nov plant varieties
172(6)
5.8.1 TRIPS provisions and obligations
172(2)
5.8.2 Current regional provisions tbr new plant varieties
174(1)
5.8.3 Scope of protection for new plant varieties
175(3)
5.9 Concluding remarks
178(2)
6 TRIPS and intellectual property enforcement 180(27)
6.1 Introduction
180(2)
6.2 TRIPS enforcement obligations and the response of the Arabian Peninsula States
182(24)
6.2.1 General obligations and civil and administrative procedures (TRIPS Articles 41-49)
182(4)
6.2.2 Provisional relief (TRIPS Article 50)
186(3)
6.2.3 Special requirements relating to border measures (TRIPS Articles 51-60)
189(4)
6.2.4 Damages, indemnification and other remedies (TRIPS Articles 45-46)
193(3)
6.2.5 Criminal procedures and sanctions (TRIPS Article 61)
196(10)
6.3 Concluding remarks
206(1)
7 Post-TRIPS and the enforcement challenge 207(41)
7.1 Introduction - the challenges for effective enforcement
207(1)
7.2 Societal attitudes - 'an honest trade'?
208(6)
7.3 Regional piracy and the enforcement response
214(6)
7.4 Judicial processes
220(4)
7.5 Prosecution and punishment
224(7)
7.6 Structural and legislative processes
231(4)
7.7 Administrative structures
235(6)
7.8 Concluding remarks
241(7)
8 TRIPS-plus and 'raising the bar' 248(45)
8.1 Introduction
248(3)
8.2 Bilateralism - 'multilateralism by the backdoor'
251(2)
8.3 Bilateral agreements between the United States and the Arabian Peninsula States
253(23)
8.3.1 The Middle East Free Trade Area (MEFTA)
254(2)
8.3.2 The US-Jordan FTA
256(5)
8.3.3 The US-Bahrain FTA
261(9)
8.3.4 The US-Oman FTA
270(5)
8.3.5 The US FTA negotiations with the other GCC member States
275(1)
8.4 Other GCC FTAs
276(4)
8.4.1 The proposed China-GCC FTA
277(3)
8.5 The role of the USTR and the Annual Special 301 Report
280(11)
8.6 Concluding remarks
291(2)
9 TRIPS-minus and protection still pending 293(25)
9.1 Introduction
293(2)
9.2 The protection of traditional knowledge and expressions of culture
295(3)
9.3 Copyright and traditional knowledge and folklore in the Arabian Peninsula
298(11)
9.4 Patents, biodiversity and access to genetic resources
309(5)
9.5 Trademarks and geographical indications
314(3)
9.6 Concluding remarks
317(1)
10 TRIPS anew - and possible future directions 318(20)
10.1 Introduction
318(3)
10.2 A climate of domestic change
321(3)
10.3 Current status of intellectual property protection in the Arabian Peninsula States
324(4)
10.4 Emergence of the GCC in regional IP leadership
328(5)
10.5 The Arabian Peninsula States and beyond the WTO
333(1)
10.6 The Arabian Peninsula States and the international arenas - new agendas?
334(2)
10.7 Concluding remarks
336(2)
Bibliography 338(13)
Appendix: Dedicated intellectual property laws, regulations and orders in the Arab Gulf states 351(17)
Index 368
David Price is Associate Professor in Intellectual Property Law and Public International Law at Charles Darwin University, Australia.



Alhanoof AlDebasi is an Intellectual Property Law lecturer at Princess Nourah Bint Abdulrahman University (PNU), College of Business and Administration in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.