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\def\WIPO{World Intellectual Property Organisation}
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The Development Agenda : Global Intellectual Property and Developing Countries
2009
F 68 NET.D
Available at WIPO Library
Items
Details
Title
The Development Agenda : Global Intellectual Property and Developing Countries
Author
Netanel, Neil Weinstock.
Description
xxiii, 524 pages : illustrations, charts, tables ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780195342109 Print
9780199866823 eBook
9780199866823 eBook
Alternate Call Number
F 68 NET.D
Summary
The Development Agenda is the result of the recent campaign to ensure that the intellectual property treaty regime permits — and, indeed, empowers — developing countries to tailor their intellectual property laws as they deem necessary to promote development and serve the welfare of their citizens. The Agenda's adoption by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) in September 2007 was an historic watershed for that UN agency, which has long viewed its mandate as the unabashed promotion of greater intellectual property rights throughout the world. Written by some of the world's leading IP scholars, Neil W. Netanel has edited this compilation of articles in order to examine the Development Agenda and the broader issues it touches upon. Contributors include leading scholars from various disciplines, including economics, political science, and law, and from countries at various stages of development, including China, India, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Nigeria, Egypt, and Israel, in addition to the US, Canada, and EU. They also include experts from NGO-think tanks, UNCTAD, and the two Brazilian diplomats who were the leading advocates of the Development Agenda's adoption.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note
Preface – Contributors
Chapter 1: Introduction: The WIPO Development Agenda and its Development Policy Context; The Development Agenda and the International IP Treaty Regime
Chapter 2: The Development Agenda at WIPO: Where Does it Stand?
Chapter 3: TRIPS 3.0: Policy Calibration and Innovation Displacement; The Development Agenda in Historical and Institutional Context
Chapter 4: The WIPO Development Agenda in a Historical and Political Context
Chapter 5: The Politics of Intellectual-Property Reform in Developing Countries: The Relevance of the World Intellectual Property Organization; The Development Agenda: Cautionary Notes from Two Directions
Chapter 6: History Lessons for the WIPO Development Agenda
Chapter 7: The WIPO Development Agenda: A Cautionary Note; Intellectual Property and Development: A Comparative Analysis
Chapter 8: What Direction Is The Wind Blowing? Protection of DRM in China
Chapter 9: Are National Patent Laws the Blossoming Rains?: Evidence from Domestic Innovation, Technology Transfers, and International Trade Post Patent Implementations in the Period 1978-2002
Chapter 10: Historical Perspectives on Patent Systems in Economic Development; Access to Medicine
Chapter 11: Expanding Patent Rights in Pharmaceuticals: The Linkage Between Patents and Drug Registration
Chapter 12: Is Product Patent Protection Necessary to Spur Innovation in Developing Countries? R&D by Indian Pharmaceutical Companies after TRIPS
Chapter 13: IPRs and Technological Development in Pharmaceuticals: Who is Patenting What in Brazil after the TRIPS?; Cultural Industries
Chapter 14: The Production of Knowledge, Innovation and IP in Developing Countries: Creative Industries and the Development Agenda
Chapter 15: Arab Musiconomics, Culture, Copyright and the Commons
Chapter 16: Michael D. Birnhack, Trading Copyright: Global Pressure on Local Culture; Industry Structure, Innovation and Access
Chapter 17: Antitrust, Patents, and Developing Nations
Chapter 18: Leonardo Burlamaqui, Innovation, Competition Policies and Intellectual Property: An Evolutionary Perspective and its Policy Implications; Intellectual Property and Developing Country Citizens' Freedom
Chapter 19: Intellectual Property and Development as Freedom
Chapter 20: Contours of an International Instrument on Limitations and Exceptions
Chapter 1: Introduction: The WIPO Development Agenda and its Development Policy Context; The Development Agenda and the International IP Treaty Regime
Chapter 2: The Development Agenda at WIPO: Where Does it Stand?
Chapter 3: TRIPS 3.0: Policy Calibration and Innovation Displacement; The Development Agenda in Historical and Institutional Context
Chapter 4: The WIPO Development Agenda in a Historical and Political Context
Chapter 5: The Politics of Intellectual-Property Reform in Developing Countries: The Relevance of the World Intellectual Property Organization; The Development Agenda: Cautionary Notes from Two Directions
Chapter 6: History Lessons for the WIPO Development Agenda
Chapter 7: The WIPO Development Agenda: A Cautionary Note; Intellectual Property and Development: A Comparative Analysis
Chapter 8: What Direction Is The Wind Blowing? Protection of DRM in China
Chapter 9: Are National Patent Laws the Blossoming Rains?: Evidence from Domestic Innovation, Technology Transfers, and International Trade Post Patent Implementations in the Period 1978-2002
Chapter 10: Historical Perspectives on Patent Systems in Economic Development; Access to Medicine
Chapter 11: Expanding Patent Rights in Pharmaceuticals: The Linkage Between Patents and Drug Registration
Chapter 12: Is Product Patent Protection Necessary to Spur Innovation in Developing Countries? R&D by Indian Pharmaceutical Companies after TRIPS
Chapter 13: IPRs and Technological Development in Pharmaceuticals: Who is Patenting What in Brazil after the TRIPS?; Cultural Industries
Chapter 14: The Production of Knowledge, Innovation and IP in Developing Countries: Creative Industries and the Development Agenda
Chapter 15: Arab Musiconomics, Culture, Copyright and the Commons
Chapter 16: Michael D. Birnhack, Trading Copyright: Global Pressure on Local Culture; Industry Structure, Innovation and Access
Chapter 17: Antitrust, Patents, and Developing Nations
Chapter 18: Leonardo Burlamaqui, Innovation, Competition Policies and Intellectual Property: An Evolutionary Perspective and its Policy Implications; Intellectual Property and Developing Country Citizens' Freedom
Chapter 19: Intellectual Property and Development as Freedom
Chapter 20: Contours of an International Instrument on Limitations and Exceptions
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Published
New York : Oxford University Press, 2009.
Language
English
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