\(
\def\WIPO{World Intellectual Property Organisation}
\)
Patenting Biotechnical Innovation : Eligibility, Ethics and Public Interest.
2022
Details
Title
Patenting Biotechnical Innovation : Eligibility, Ethics and Public Interest.
Item Type
Book
Description
224 pages.
ISBN
9781800884410 eBook
9781800884403 Print
9781800884403 Print
Summary
This book examines patent law and policy in biotechnology across the full lifecycle of the patent, focusing on the patent bargain and the public interest. It considers the central issues of how to strike an effective balance of rights, and whether public interest is adequately safeguarded - two issues that are particularly important in areas of rapidly emerging technology. Expert contributors are brought together to explore patent eligibility in biotechnology, focusing on the fields of precision medicine, biofabrication and non-invasive prenatal testing. Chapters also explore the construction and coherence of exceptions to patentability,an examination of FRAND licensing in the context of the internet of medical things, and the possibility of using licensing to encourage or ensure the ethical use of patented technologies. With its carefully constructed analysis, this book will be an excellent resource for academic researchers, and students, in the fields of biotechnology law, pharmaceutical law and intellectual property law. It will also be useful for legal practitioners and policymakers, as well as charitable bodies and non-governmental organisations. Provided by publisher.
Note
Includes index.
Formatted Contents Note
1. Introduction
patenting biotechnical innovation: in the public interest?
2. Patent eligibility and precision medicine: emerging technologies, legal flux and empirical methods
3. Non-invasive prenatal testing and the resilience of the patent system
4. Patentability of biofabricated human organs: ‘products of nature’ or ‘products derived from nature’ revisited
5. A problem of interpretation: is Article 53(a) EPC necessarily restrictive of emerging technologies?
6. Invoking the public interest in the European patent system
7. Repositioning the access to healthcare debate: FRAND and the Internet of Medical Things
8. Accounting for ethical considerations in the licensing of patented biotechnologies and health-related technologies: a justification
9. Patents and the public interest: a multi-faceted approach
Index
patenting biotechnical innovation: in the public interest?
2. Patent eligibility and precision medicine: emerging technologies, legal flux and empirical methods
3. Non-invasive prenatal testing and the resilience of the patent system
4. Patentability of biofabricated human organs: ‘products of nature’ or ‘products derived from nature’ revisited
5. A problem of interpretation: is Article 53(a) EPC necessarily restrictive of emerging technologies?
6. Invoking the public interest in the European patent system
7. Repositioning the access to healthcare debate: FRAND and the Internet of Medical Things
8. Accounting for ethical considerations in the licensing of patented biotechnologies and health-related technologies: a justification
9. Patents and the public interest: a multi-faceted approach
Index
Source of Description
Description based on print record.
Linked Resources
Published
[Northampton, England] : Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd., 2022.
Language
English
Record Appears in