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El. knyga: TRIPS plus 20: From Trade Rules to Market Principles

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This book examines the impact and shortcomings of the TRIPS Agreement, which was signed in Marrakesh on 15 April 1994. Over the last 20 years, the framework conditions have changed fundamentally. New technologies have emerged, markets have expanded beyond national borders, some developing states have become global players, the terms of international competition have changed, and the intellectual property system faces increasing friction with public policies.  The contributions to this book inquire into whether the TRIPS Agreement should still be seen only as part of an international trade regulation, or whether it needs to be understood or even reconceptualized as a framework regulation for the international protection of intellectual property. The purpose, therefore, is not to define the terms of an outright revision of the TRIPS Agreement but rather to discuss the framework conditions for an interpretative evolution that could makethe Agreement better suited to the expectations and needs of todays global economy.
Part I Revisiting the Policy Rationale of TRIPS The Origins and Structure of the TRIPS Agreement
3(130)
William Cornish
Kathleen Liddell
The Concept of Trade-Relatedness of Intellectual Property Rights in Times of Post-TRIPS Bilateralism
53(32)
Josef Drexl
The Political Foundations of TRIPS Revisited
85(48)
Hanns Ullrich
Part II TRIPS as a Legal Framework: Which Geometry?
From Minimum Standards to Maximum Rules
133(30)
Annette Kur
IP and Trade in a Post-TRIPS Environment
163(22)
Henning Grosse Ruse-Khan
Ways Out of the Trap of Article 1(1) TRIPS
185(28)
Reto M. Hilty
Part III Systems Challenges
The Proportionality Principle in the TRIPS Agreement
213(32)
Max Wallot
The Commodification of Internet Intermediary Safe Harbors: Avoiding Premature Harmonization Around a Suboptimal Standard
245(34)
Seth Ericsson
Regulatory Innovation and the Institutional Design of the TRIPS Agreement
279(34)
Rupprecht Podszun
Benjamin Franz
Intellectual Property Harmonization in the Name of Trade
313(48)
Matthias Lamping
Part IV TRIPS and Countervailing Principles
Revisiting the Principle of Technological Neutrality in Patent Protection in the Age of 3D Printing Technology and Cloud Computing
361(28)
Nari Lee
Article 27(3)(b) TRIPS and Plant Variety Protection in Developing Countries
389(26)
Christoph Antons
TRIPS and Climate Change in the International Economic Order
415(30)
Agnieszka A. Machnicka
Establishing Conformity Between TRIPS and Human Rights: Hierarchy in International Law, Human Rights Obligations of the WTO and Extraterritorial State Obligations Under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
445(64)
Klaus D. Beiter
Part V Exclusivity, Access and Innovation
From Transfer of Technology to Innovation Through Access
509(20)
Peter Picht
TRIPS and Competition Rules: From Transfer of Technology to Innovation Policy
529(32)
Mor Bakhoum
Beatriz Conde Gallego
How Public Is the Public Domain? The Perpetual Protection of Inventions, Designs and Works by Trademarks
561(20)
Kaya Koklu
Sylvie Nerisson
Dependent Patents Under Art. 31 TRIPS: Lessons from Copyright Law
581(22)
Matthias Leistner
Part VI From Enforcing to Enhancing TRIPS
The WTO/TRIPS Dispute Settlement Mechanism: Experiences and Perspectives
603(18)
Silke von Lewinski
Merging ACTA into TRIPS: Does TRIPS-Based IP Enforcement Need Reform?
621(24)
Thomas Jaeger
Towards a Balanced International Legal Framework for Criminal Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights
645(36)
Christophe Geiger
TRIPS and Consumer Protection
681(20)
Ansgar Ohly
TRIPS and Corporate Social Responsibility: Unethical Equals Unfair Business Practices?
701(24)
Frauke Henning-Bodewig
Enhancing TRIPS: Trade Secrets and Reverse Engineering
725
Gintare Surblyte