Rules of Engagement: Trademark Strategies, Protection and Enforcement in China provides an in-depth strategic view of trademark challenges in China thereby serving as guidance for foreign brand owners seeking strategies to engage with the Chinese legal and business landscape. China now leads the world in a number of registered trademarks. In recent years, however, higher volumes of enforcement have not brought about the end of trademark theft and counterfeiting. Consequently, most Westerners doing business in China (or preparing to do so) have negative views of the country’s system of IPR. This powerful book, by the world’s most experienced authority on how law and business interact in China’s trademark context, provides deeply informed and positive guidance for foreign brand owners seeking strategies that realistically engage with the Chinese legal and business landscape, thus showing how to reduce risk and benefit from the actually existing system. What’s in this Book: The author sets forth “rules of engagement” – strategic rules of conduct that provide guidance as to how to learn, understand, and approach trademark challenges in China in an objective manner. Issues and topics covered include the following: acquisition of trademark rights in China; infringement of trademark rights and claim basis; preparatory investigation and case build-up; available enforcement tools and procedures; remedial strategies responding to trademark theft; evidentiary burdens in proving infringement; geographic location and specific characteristics of counterfeiting hubs; privileged relations between investigative companies and enforcing authorities; and increasing presence of online professional trademark thieves. Detailed discussion of a number of cases (in fields including automotive, clothing, wine, pharmaceuticals, electronic devices, and sports apparel) isolates certain common patterns and proves that, aside from certain malfunctions of the trademark system, a substantial amount of responsibility for failure can be laid with the brands and not with China’s enforcement authorities.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 227-229) and index
Formatted Contents Note
About the Author – Preface List of Abbreviations Chapter 1: An Introduction to Trademark Protection and Enforcement in China Chapter 2: Know the Rules and Play the Game Chapter 3: Trademark Protection: Hostile Trademarks and Trademark Theft Chapter 4: Against All Odds: Brand Protection in China Chapter 5: Learned Lessons and Take-Aways Bibliography and Periodicals Index.