000027459 000__ 05597cam\a2200481\i\4500 000027459 001__ 27459 000027459 003__ SzGeWIPO 000027459 005__ 20230331124253.0 000027459 008__ 130904s2014\\\\nyu\\\\\rb\\\\001\0\eng\\ 000027459 010__ $$a2013035975 000027459 020__ $$a9780199334278$$qPrint 000027459 020__ $$z9780199361106$$qeBook 000027459 035__ $$a(wipo)17874998 000027459 035__ $$a(OCoLC)858080904 000027459 040__ $$aSzGeWIPO$$beng$$erda$$cSzGeWIPO$$dCaBNVSL 000027459 041__ $$aeng 000027459 050_4 $$aK1505$$b.P3747 2014 000027459 08204 $$a346.0486$$223 000027459 084__ $$aG 91 OKE.P 000027459 1001_ $$aOkediji, Ruth L.,$$aBagley, Margo A.$$eEditors. 000027459 24510 $$aPatent Law in Global Perspective. 000027459 264_1 $$aNew York :$$bOxford University Press,$$c2014. 000027459 300__ $$axxxiii, 734 pages ;$$c25 cm 000027459 336__ $$atext$$btxt$$2rdacontent 000027459 337__ $$aunmediated$$bn$$2rdamedia 000027459 338__ $$avolume$$bnc$$2rdacarrier 000027459 504__ $$aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 000027459 5050_ $$aAcknowledgments – Preface – Introduction -- Table of Abstracts -- Chapter 1: Public Welfare and the International Patent System -- Part I-Global Patent Law and the Political Economy of Harmonization -- Chapter 2: Intellectual Property Lawmaking, Global Governance, and Emerging Economies -- Chapter 3: US Executive Branch Patent Policy, Global and Domestic -- Chapter 4: Transnational Legal Ordering and Access to Medicines -- Chapter 5: The Limits of Substantive Patent Law Harmonization -- Part II-Global Approaches to Subject Matter Standards and Eligibility -- Chapter 6: Patent Barbarians at the Gate: The Who, What, When, Where, Why and How of U.S. Patent Subject Matter Eligibility Disputes -- Chapter 7: Patent Law's Problem Children: Software and Biotechnology in Transatlantic Context -- Chapter 8: Patenting Plants: A Comparative Synthesis -- Chapter 9: Enablement and Written Description -- Part III-Patents, Institutions, and Innovation Pathways -- Chapter 10: Indigenous Developmental Networks and the Non-developmental State: Making Intellectual Property Work for Indigenous People without Patents -- Chapter 11: Observing the Patent System in Social and Political Perspective: A Case Study of Europe -- Chapter 12: Toward a Theory of Regulatory Exclusivities -- Part IV-Exceptions and Limits to Patent Protection -- Chapter 13: A False Sense of Security Offered by Zero-Price Liability Rules? Research Exceptions in the United States, Europe, and Japan in an Open Innovation Context -- Chapter 14: Exhaustion and Patent Rights -- Chapter 15: A New Approach to the Compulsory License Conundrum -- Chapter 16: Balancing "Incentive to Innovate" and "Protection of Competition" -- An African Perspective on Intellectual Property Rights and Competition Law -- Part V-TRIPS Compliance, Patent Enforcement, and Patent Remedies -- Chapter 17: Patentability Criteria as TRIPS Flexibilities: The Examples of China and India -- Chapter 18: Proof of Progress: The Role of the Inventive Step/Non-obviousness Standard in the Indian Patent Office -- Chapter 19: Pharmaceutical Patent Enforcement: A Development Perspective -- Chapter 20: A Research Agenda for the Comparative Law and Economics of Patent Remedies -- Chapter 21: The Rule of Patent Law (RPL) as Established by the TRIPS Agreement and Its Role of Promoting Trade Rather than Invention -- Index 000027459 520__ $$aPatent Law in Global Perspective addresses critical and timely questions in patent law from a truly global perspective, with contributions from leading patent law scholars from various countries. Offering fresh insights and new approaches to evaluating key institutional, economic, doctrinal, and practical issues, these chapters reflect critical analyses and review developments in national patent laws, efforts to reform the global patent system, and reconfigure geopolitical interests. Professors Ruth L. Okediji and Margo A. Bagley bring together the first collection to explore patent law issues through the lens of economic development theory, international relations, theoretical foundations for the patent law system in the global context, and more. Topics include: the role of patent law in economic development; the efficacy of patent rights in facilitating innovation; patents and access to medicines; comparative patentability standards (including subject matter eligibility for biotechnology and software inventions); limitations and exceptions to patent scope and protection (including exhaustion, compulsory licensing, and research exceptions); patents on plants and other living organisms; and the impact of emerging economies on global patent system governance. The contributors provide a wealth of original insight and thought-provoking discussion that will be of great interest and benefit to scholars, policymakers, and practitioners alike. 000027459 650_0 $$aPatents (International law) 000027459 650_0 $$aPatents. 000027459 650_0 $$aPatent laws and legislation. 000027459 650_0 $$aIntellectual property. 000027459 650_6 $$aBrevets d'invention$$xDroit. 000027459 7001_ $$aMargo A. Bagley,$$aMor Bakhoum,$$aShamnad Basheer,$$aDan L. Burk,$$aNuno Pires de Carvalho,$$aThomas F. Cotter,$$aPeter Drahos,$$aRochelle C. Dreyfuss,$$aGraham Dutfield,$$aMatthew Fisher,$$aDaniel Gervais,$$aChristopher Heath,$$aCynthia Ho,$$aClifford E. Vickrey,$$aMark D. Janis,$$aRobert A. Lucas,$$aFeroz Ali Khader,$$aRuth L. Okediji,$$aWilliam L. Prosser,$$aShobita Parthasarathy,$$aSrividhya Ragavan,$$aArti K. Rai,$$aElvin R. Latty,$$aSusan K. Sell,$$aGregory Shaffer,$$aMelvin C. Steen,$$aJohn R. Thomas,$$aGeertrui van Overwalle,$$aEsther van Zimmeren,$$aAlexis Walker.$$eContributors. 000027459 85641 $$uhttps://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/wipo/detail.action?docID=4842575$$yView eBook 000027459 85641 $$uhttps://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199334278.001.0001$$yView eBook 000027459 942__ $$2ddc$$cMON 000027459 952__ $$w2015-01-29$$p2015-0003$$r142.50$$u41961$$bMAIN$$10$$kG 91 OKE.P$$v2015-01-29$$zTagged$$71 000027459 980__ $$aBIB 000027459 980__ $$aOS 000027459 999__ $$c29895$$d29895