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\def\WIPO{World Intellectual Property Organisation}
\)
Intellectual property rights in emerging markets / Clarisa Long, editor.
2000
F 630 LON.I
Available at WIPO Library
Items
Details
Title
Intellectual property rights in emerging markets / Clarisa Long, editor.
Author
Description
vii, 130 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
0844741256 cloth : alk. paper
0844741264 pbk. : alk. paper
9780844741253 cloth
9780844741260 paperback
0844741264 pbk. : alk. paper
9780844741253 cloth
9780844741260 paperback
Alternate Call Number
F 630 LON.I
Summary
"With the globalization of the world economy, developing nations are finding that maintaining competitiveness is a critical factor in development. Intellectual property protection has increasingly become a factor in attracting foreign and domestic investment and in maximizing a country's economic growth potential. As policymakers in developing countries struggle to attract investment and world-class technologies to their shores, they are beginning to pay more attention to their standards of intellectual property protection."--Jacket.
Formatted Contents Note
Introduction / Clarisa Long
The political economy of intellectual property rights protection in the People's Republic of China / Mark A. Groombridge
The Indian intellectual property rights regime and the TRIPs agreement / Shondeep Banerji
Can intellectual property in Latin America be protected? / Edgardo Buscaglia.
The political economy of intellectual property rights protection in the People's Republic of China / Mark A. Groombridge
The Indian intellectual property rights regime and the TRIPs agreement / Shondeep Banerji
Can intellectual property in Latin America be protected? / Edgardo Buscaglia.
Series
Published
Washington, D.C. : AEI Press, 2000.
Language
English
Record Appears in
Review
"With the globalization of the world economy, developing nations are finding that maintaining competitiveness is a critical factor in development. Intellectual property protection has increasingly become a factor in attracting foreign and domestic investment and in maximizing a country's economic growth potential. As policymakers in developing countries struggle to attract investment and world-class technologies to their shores, they are beginning to pay more attention to their standards of intellectual property protection."--Jacket.