Advanced introduction to international intellectual property / Susy Frankel, Faculty of Law, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand ; Daniel J. Gervais, Vanderbilt University Law School, USA.
2016
K1402 .F73 2016 (Map It)
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Author
Title
Advanced introduction to international intellectual property / Susy Frankel, Faculty of Law, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand ; Daniel J. Gervais, Vanderbilt University Law School, USA.
Published
Cheltenham, UK ; Northampton, MA, USA : Edward Elgar Publishing, [2016]
Copyright
©2016
Call Number
K1402 .F73 2016
ISBN
9781783470495 (cased)
1783470496 (cased)
9781783473427 (paperback)
1783473428 (paperback)
9781783470501 (e-book)
1783470496 (cased)
9781783473427 (paperback)
1783473428 (paperback)
9781783470501 (e-book)
Description
vii, 136 pages : illustration ; 22 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)924628649
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Portion of Title
International intellectual property
Added Author
Table of Contents
Introduction
1
1.
institutions and actors of international intellectual property
5
1.1.
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)
6
1.2.
World Trade Organization (WTO)
9
1.2.1.
Establishment of the WTO
9
1.2.2.
WTO dispute settlement process
11
2.
major instruments of international intellectual property
16
2.1.
International intellectual property before the TRIPS Agreement
17
2.1.1.
Paris Convention
17
2.1.2.
Berne Convention
25
2.2.
emergence of the TRIPS Agreement
28
2.2.1.
TRIPS Agreement negotiations
30
2.2.2.
Post-TRIPS negotiations
32
2.3.
structure of the TRIPS Agreement
36
2.4.
General objectives of the TRIPS Agreement
38
3.
Key concepts of international intellectual property
42
3.1.
territorial nature of intellectual property
42
3.2.
Principles of treaty interpretation
45
3.3.
Minimum standards, implementing the treaty and more extensive protection
50
3.4.
National treatment
52
3.5.
Most-favoured-nation (MFN) treatment
54
3.6.
three-step test
56
3.6.1.
Emergence and dispersion of the three-step test
56
3.6.2.
Interpretation of the three-step test
68
4.
current norms of international intellectual property
78
4.1.
International copyright and design protection
78
4.1.1.
Berne Convention
78
4.1.2.
TRIPS Agreement and copyright
80
4.1.3.
Other copyright instruments
81
4.2.
(Industrial) designs
83
4.3.
Copyright developments subsequent to the TRIPS Agreement
84
4.3.1.
WIPO Copyright Treaty 1996 (WCT)
84
4.3.2.
WIPO Producers of Phonograms and Sound Recordings Treaty 1996 (WPPT)
86
4.3.3.
Beijing Treaty on Audio-visual Performances
87
4.3.4.
Marrakesh Treaty to Facilitate Access to Published Works for Persons Who Are Blind, Visually Impaired, or Otherwise Print Disabled
88
4.4.
International patent protection
88
4.4.1.
General
88
4.4.2.
Patents and the TRIPS Agreement
89
4.4.3.
Paris Convention
97
4.4.4.
Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT)
98
4.4.5.
International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants
98
4.4.6.
Convention on Biological Diversity 1992 and the Nagoya Protocol
99
4.5.
Trademarks, unfair competition and GIs protection
100
4.5.1.
TRIPS Agreement and trademarks
101
4.5.2.
Paris Convention
104
4.5.3.
Nice Agreement on the Classification of Goods and Services 1957
106
4.5.4.
Madrid Agreement and Protocol
106
4.5.5.
Lisbon system
107
5.
Key issues in international intellectual property
109
5.1.
International human rights and intellectual property
109
5.2.
Enforcement of intellectual property rights
111
5.2.1.
Enforcement under the TRIPS Agreement
111
5.2.2.
Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA)
112
5.3.
Importation rights
114
5.3.1.
Scope of this section
114
5.3.2.
Distinguishing between parallel importation and importation of pirated goods
114
5.3.3.
Article 31bis of the TRIPS Agreement
115
5.4.
International law at the national level: conflict of laws
116
5.4.1.
Basic conflict of laws concepts
116
5.5.
Traditional knowledge and indigenous resources
120
5.5.1.
scope of traditional knowledge
120
5.5.2.
Who seeks the protection of traditional knowledge?
121
5.5.3.
problem with not protecting traditional knowledge
122
5.5.4.
Possible ways of protecting traditional knowledge and international negotiations
124
5.5.5.
WIPO and traditional knowledge
126
5.6.
Bilateral and plurilateral trade agreements
126
5.7.
Intellectual property as a cross-border investment asset
128
Final thoughts
130
Index
131