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El. knyga: TRIPS and Developing Countries: Towards a New IP World Order?

Edited by , Edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-Feb-2014
  • Leidėjas: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781849804943
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-Feb-2014
  • Leidėjas: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781849804943

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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

Recenzijos

This book will be of great interest to academics, students and policy-makers concerned with the contemporary debates around IPRs and the development agenda and the cross-cutting concern of human rights. Many of the authors have played important roles within the Association of Teachers and Researchers in Intellectual Property (ATRIP), which is the current leading international IPR research association. -- Michael Blakeney, European Intellectual Property Review

List of contributors
vii
Introduction 1(11)
Rudolph J.R. Peritz
1 When framing meets law: Using human rights as a practical instrument to facilitate access to medicines in developing countries
12(27)
Duncan Matthews
2 Issues and strategies of China IP protection after the TRIPS Agreement
39(33)
Lifang Dong
3 Patent and trademark rights in commercial agreements entered by the United States with Latin American nations in the first decade of the twenty-first century: Divide et vinces
72(37)
Horacio Rangel-Ortiz
4 Compulsory licensing of intellectual property: A viable policy lever for promoting access to critical technologies?
109(23)
Charles R. McManis
Jorge L. Contreras
5 On TRIPS' impact on `least developed countries': The effects of a `double standards' approach
132(10)
Gustavo Ghidini
6 Adjudicating TRIPS for development
142(21)
Molly Land
7 The IPT Project -- proposals to reform the TRIPS Agreement
163(53)
Annette Kur
Marianne Levin
8 Access to genetic resources and benefit sharing: The Nagoya Protocol in the light of the TRIPS Agreement
216(23)
Linda Briceno Moraia
9 The illusion of the TRIPS Agreement to promote creativity and innovation in developing countries: Case study on Kenya
239(63)
James Otieno Odek
10 Public sector information, intellectual property data and developing countries
302(14)
Marco Ricolfi
Index 316
Edited by Gustavo Ghidini, Professor Emeritus, University of Milan and Senior Professor of Intellectual Property and Competition Law, LUISS University, Rome, Italy, the late Rudolph J.R. Peritz, formerly Professor and Director, IProgress Project, New York Law School, US and Marco Ricolfi, Professor of Intellectual Property Law, University of Turin and Tosetto Weigmann and Associati, Turin and Milan, Italy