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Book Review: Intellectual Property Law in China, 2nd Edition

The IPKat

The first edition of Intellectual Property Law in China (IPLCN) was the first of a bunch of goodies this Kat enthusiastically gathered from the incomparable IP library of the Max Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition (MPI).

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How about personalized medicine? Is the IP and Regulatory legal framework ready for this?

The IPKat

The Speakers (in alphabetical order) Duncan Matthews is the former Director of the Queen Mary Intellectual Property Research Institute and a member of the Centre for Commercial Law Studies. Frantzeska Papadopoulou is Professor of Intellectual Property Rights at the Law Faculty, Stockholm University.

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Evergreening of Patents

Kashishipr

On the other hand, international trade law recognizes that where a unique problem arises specifically referable only to a particular field of technology, a solution applying sui generis only to that field of technology cannot be said to be discriminatory according to the ordinary meaning and purpose of the TRIPS Agreement. Conclusion.

Patent 105
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[Guest post] Book review: ‘Developments and Directions in Intellectual Property Law: 20 Years of the IPKat’

The IPKat

The book, titled Developments and Directions in Intellectual Property Law. And, speaking of the book, we are happy to re-publish the review that Bill Patry (Mayer Brown) provided of it, as just published by the Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice.

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[Guest post] Closing the patent loophole across borders

The IPKat

has written about this in an article that was recently published in the UIC Review of Intellectual Property Law. Here's what Mattias writes: Closing the patent loophole across borders by Mattias Rättzén Extra-territorial Kats It is a legal maxim that patents, like any other intellectual property rights, are territorial rights.

Patent 84